4.6 Review

Climate change and cardiovascular disease: implications for global health

Journal

NATURE REVIEWS CARDIOLOGY
Volume 19, Issue 12, Pages 798-812

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41569-022-00720-x

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Kuwait Foundation for the Advancement of Sciences-KFAS [CR19-13NH-01]
  2. Medical Research Council UK [MR/R013349/1]
  3. Natural Environment Research Council UK [NE/R009384/1]
  4. European Union [820655]
  5. NERC [NE/R009384/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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The complex relationship between climate change and health outcomes includes multiple exposure pathways that may contribute to the development of non-communicable diseases. A collaborative approach involving medical professionals, scientific researchers, public health officials, and policymakers is needed to address the climate crisis.
The relationship between climate change and health outcomes is complex. In this Review, Rajagopalan and colleagues describe the environmental exposures associated with climate change and provide an overview of the consequences of climate change, including air pollution and extreme temperatures, on cardiovascular health and disease. Climate change is the greatest existential challenge to planetary and human health and is dictated by a shift in the Earth's weather and air conditions owing to anthropogenic activity. Climate change has resulted not only in extreme temperatures, but also in an increase in the frequency of droughts, wildfires, dust storms, coastal flooding, storm surges and hurricanes, as well as multiple compound and cascading events. The interactions between climate change and health outcomes are diverse and complex and include several exposure pathways that might promote the development of non-communicable diseases such as cardiovascular disease. A collaborative approach is needed to solve this climate crisis, whereby medical professionals, scientific researchers, public health officials and policymakers should work together to mitigate and limit the consequences of global warming. In this Review, we aim to provide an overview of the consequences of climate change on cardiovascular health, which result from direct exposure pathways, such as shifts in ambient temperature, air pollution, forest fires, desert (dust and sand) storms and extreme weather events. We also describe the populations that are most susceptible to the health effects caused by climate change and propose potential mitigation strategies, with an emphasis on collaboration at the scientific, governmental and policy levels.

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