Close X
Sunday, December 1, 2024
ADVT 
National

Heat-wave death risk grows for seniors in Canada

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 20 Oct, 2021 04:08 PM
  • Heat-wave death risk grows for seniors in Canada

OTTAWA - A new report examining the health impacts of climate change says more Canadians than ever are facing serious health risks from heat waves and wildfires, prompting warnings from doctors that we need to do more to adapt to the reality of a warmer planet.

The annual Lancet Countdown study looks at more than three dozen markers for human health impacts of climate change globally.

"This year we saw people suffering intense heat waves, deadly floods and wildfires," said lead author Marina Romanello, a biochemist at London's Institute for Global Health.

"These are grim warnings that for every day that we delay our response to climate change, the situation gets more critical."

In Canada, the authors note, the heat dome that descended on British Columbia and parts of the Prairies in June and July "would have been almost impossible without human-caused climate change."

That heat wave lasted several weeks and saw the town of Lytton, B.C., destroyed by a fire a day after it recorded a temperature of 49.6 C, the highest temperature ever seen in Canada.

The Lancet study says that heat wave was responsible for at least 570 deaths in Canada, and hundreds more in the United States.

Across Canada, the risk of death from extreme heat for Canada's seniors rose more than 50 per cent in the last four years, compared with the years 2000 to 2004. Exposures to wildfires grew almost 20 per cent in that time, but not uniformly, with Indigenous Peoples at much higher risk.

First Nations people living on a reserve are 33 times more likely to be forced to evacuate due to a forest fire than people living off reserve, the Lancet report said.

The authors also said that in 2020, heat caused the loss of more than 22 million hours of potential labour in Canada, harming human health and productivity at the same time.

Globally, climate change left almost one-fifth of the world's land surface in extreme drought in 2020. Between 1950 and 1999, that value never exceeded 13 per cent. The resulting impact on crops saw a decrease in production of rice, soybeans, wheat and maize of between two and six per cent.

Dr. Courtney Howard, an emergency room physician in Yellowknife and past president of the Canadian Association of Physicians for the Environment, helped write the Canadian briefing note out of the Lancet Countdown's global findings.

She said this year the focus was more heavily on the need for adapting to the fact that climate change isn't just real, it's already hurting us.

"So how are we going to get each other through these heat waves and these wildfire episodes in a way that's as healthy as possible?"

The Canadian briefing note lays out several policy requests, including more green space in urban areas to offset the impact of heat waves, and a national strategy for adaptation to climate change that takes into account the serious harm to human health.

The authors are also highly critical of the federal government for allowing itself to be heavily influenced by lobbying from the oil and gas industry. They said in the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic, fossil fuel industries and associations met with federal officials 1,224 times, an average of 4.5 meetings every day.

Comparatively, they say environment groups met with federal officials 303 times.

"Energy transition policy must be developed without such excessive industry pressure," the report said.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

785 COVID19 cases for Wednesday

785 COVID19 cases for Wednesday
B.C. added 785 new COVID-19 cases for Wednesday. There have now been 166,853 cases of COVID-19 in B.C. since the pandemic began, as well as 1,818 related deaths.

785 COVID19 cases for Wednesday

Threatening note received at Langley Islamic Center

Threatening note received at Langley Islamic Center
Investigators have engaged the BC Hate Crime Unit and INSET (Integrated National Security Enforcement Team) to collaborate and are endeavouring to identify the author of the note and following all investigative avenues in this investigation.

Threatening note received at Langley Islamic Center

Burnaby RCMP ask for public assistance in identifying a suspect that may have been involved in3 unprovoked assaults

Burnaby RCMP ask for public assistance in identifying a suspect that may have been involved in3 unprovoked assaults
On Monday, August 30, at approximately 1:40 p.m., an unknown man approached a 25-year-old woman and wrestled her to the ground in the area of Edmonds Street and Canada Way. It’s believed the victim may have been followed for a short distance.    

Burnaby RCMP ask for public assistance in identifying a suspect that may have been involved in3 unprovoked assaults

Two children involved in Vancouver coyote attacks

Two children involved in Vancouver coyote attacks
Conservation officers are patrolling the park and the service says it's working with provincial wildlife biologists to determine how to manage the animals.

Two children involved in Vancouver coyote attacks

Can we reach herd immunity with COVID-19?

Can we reach herd immunity with COVID-19?
Herd immunity refers to having enough people within a community protected from a virus or pathogen, either through natural infection or vaccination, that transmission becomes unlikely.

Can we reach herd immunity with COVID-19?

Evacuation orders due to B.C. wildfires drop

Evacuation orders due to B.C. wildfires drop
The emergency operations centre for the central Okanagan says assessments of neighbourhoods directly affected by the 830-square-kilometre White Rock Lake fire along the western banks of Okanagan Lake should be complete by Thursday.

Evacuation orders due to B.C. wildfires drop