4.7 Article

Regular physical activity across the lifespan to build resilience against rising global temperatures

期刊

EBIOMEDICINE
卷 96, 期 -, 页码 -

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.ebiom.2023.104793

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Climate change; Global warming; Resilience; Adaptation; Exercise; Thermoregulation

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Population aging, high prevalence of non-communicable diseases, physical inactivity, and rising global temperatures are major public health concerns. Regular physical activity throughout life can play an important role in adapting to rising temperatures, coping with heat-related health risks, and increasing individual and community resilience. This viewpoint calls for more research on the contribution of physical activity to adapting to rising global temperatures and climate change.
Population aging, high prevalence of non-communicable diseases, physical inactivity, and rising global temperatures are some of the most pressing issues in public health of the current century. Such trends suggest that individuals increasingly less equipped to tolerate heat will be increasingly exposed to it, which from a public health perspective is alarming. Nonetheless, future impacts of extreme heat events will depend not only on the magnitude of climate change, but on our ability to adapt by becoming less sensitive and vulnerable. Although physical activity's role in mitigating climate change has received attention, its potential contribution to climate change adaptation and resilience remains largely unaddressed. Accordingly, in this viewpoint, we discuss how regular physical activity throughout life could have an important contribution to adapting to rising global temperatures, allowing to be better equipped to cope with heat-related health hazards and increasing individual and community resilience. This viewpoint constitutes a call for more research into the contribution that physical activity can have in adapting to rising global temperatures and, more broadly, to climate change. Copyright (c) 2023 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier B.V. This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

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