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The global climate crisis is one of the most defining challenges of our time, with profound implications not just for the environment, but also for human health. While the impacts of climate change are felt worldwide, they are disproportionately severe in developing countries, where populations are more vulnerable due to economic, social, and infrastructural limitations.
This book, Climate Change and Health: Perspectives from Developing Countries, seeks to bring attention to the unique challenges faced by these nations, while also highlighting their innovative solutions and resilience in the face of an increasingly unstable climate.
This book brings together a wide range of perspectives from researchers, healthcare professionals, and community leaders from across the developing world. It explores the diverse ways in which climate change is affecting health, drawing on case studies, especially from Africa, Developing regions face different challenges, from rising sea levels to food insecurity, but they also share common experiences of vulnerability and resilience.
List of contents
1. Effects of ambient temperature and its effect modifiers on malaria in Bamako, Mali.- 2. Climate Change Impacts on Children s Health in Nigeria.- 3. Navigating Healthcare Systems Challenges Amidst Climate Change Impacts in Coastal Bangladesh.- 4. On the frontline of climate change and health: A health worker eyewitness report from the Global South.- 5. Epidemiological Modelling of Climate-Dependent Diseases: Case of Dengue Fever in Burkina Faso.
About the author
Professor Walter Leal holds the Chair of Climate Change Management and Health at the Hamburg University of Applied Sciences (Germany), the first of ist kind in Germany, and the Chair of Environment and Technology at Manchester Metropolitan University (UK). He directs the Research and Transfer Centre "Sustainability Development and Climate Change Management". His main research interests are in the fields of sustainable development and climate change, also including aspects of climate change and health.
Dr Franziska Wolf heads the Climate Change and Health Division at the Research and Transfer Centre “Sustainability Development and Climate Change Management” and directs the International Expert Centre on Climate Change and Health (IECCH) at the Hamburg University of Applied Sciences. Her main research interests are in the field of sustainable adaptation to climate change including aspects of climate change and health, in particular but not limited to the Global South.
Summary
The global climate crisis is one of the most defining challenges of our time, with profound implications not just for the environment, but also for human health. While the impacts of climate change are felt worldwide, they are disproportionately severe in developing countries, where populations are more vulnerable due to economic, social, and infrastructural limitations.
This book, Climate Change and Health: Perspectives from Developing Countries, seeks to bring attention to the unique challenges faced by these nations, while also highlighting their innovative solutions and resilience in the face of an increasingly unstable climate.
This book brings together a wide range of perspectives from researchers, healthcare professionals, and community leaders from across the developing world. It explores the diverse ways in which climate change is affecting health, drawing on case studies, especially from Africa, Developing regions face different challenges, from rising sea levels to food insecurity, but they also share common experiences of vulnerability and resilience.