Medical leaders call on Aussie gov't to roll out national climate health action plan

0 Comment(s)Print E-mail Xinhua, September 5, 2022
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CANBERRA, Sept. 5 (Xinhua) -- A coalition of top medical groups have called for the Australian government to urgently roll out a national climate health action plan.

In a statement released Monday, the Climate and Health Alliance (CAHA), which is made up of more than 40 health and medical organizations, warned that the strain on the health system was growing as Australia is hit by more catastrophic fires and floods.

Ahead of meeting at the Better Futures Forum in Canberra on Monday, health leaders said they would discuss the urgent priorities for the government's proposed national climate health plan.

"Climate change is already killing Australians. The pressure on the health system and our health professionals is immense - all in the middle of a global pandemic," Fiona Armstrong, founder of the CAHA, said in the statement.

"We have created a suite of recommendations to prepare and protect people and the health system from the now inevitable impacts of climate change."

Members of the CAHA include the Australian Medical Association (AMA), Royal Australasian College of Physicians (RACP), and peak bodies representing nurses, midwives and psychologists.

They warned that between 1991 and 2018 there were an additional 3,000 deaths in Sydney, Melbourne and Brisbane - Australia's three biggest cities - attributed to extreme heat.

"In this year alone, 23 people died in floods following a three-week deluge of rain along the east coast," said the statement.

During the devastating 2019-20 Black Summer bushfires 33 people were killed directly in the fires while it was estimated that another 445 died as a result of smoke inhalation, with more than 3,000 hospitalized for smoke inhalation, said CAHA.

"Doctors have a unique view and considerable experience of how climate health and human health fit together because we see the impacts of climate change all the time, on our patients, and on our staff who are at the front line dealing with crises every day," RACP president Jacqueline Small said.

Health leaders have called for a ministerial forum to coordinate across health, climate and other portfolios, an evaluation of the health and economic damages from climate change, a sustainable healthcare unit in the Department of Health to guide the health sector towards environmentally sustainable. Enditem

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