A Canadian facing breathing issues was diagnosed as possibly the first patient in the world suffering from “climate change,” as doctors said heatwaves and poor air quality were responsible for his condition.
Dr Kyle Merritt, responsible for the diagnosis of the senior citizen from Nelson in British Columbia who suffered from asthma, said this was the first time in a decade that he wrote climate change as a cause of suffering.
“If we’re not
looking at the underlying cause, and we’re just treating the symptoms, we’re
just gonna keep falling further and further behind,” the emergency room doctor
told the Glacier Media.
“It’s me trying to just... process what I’m seeing,” he adds.
Canada has suffered
from a historic heatwave this year in June, followed by a thick smog season
triggered by wildfires.
British Columbia,
the westernmost province of Canada, crossed record-breaking temperatures in
June, which is believed to have killed 500 people. The wildfire caused the air
quality to become 43 times worse than levels acceptable as safe throughout July
and August.
“We’re in the emergency
department, we look after everybody, from the most privileged to the most
vulnerable, from cradle to grave, we see everybody. And it’s hard to see
people, especially the most vulnerable people in our society, being affected.
It’s frustrating,” Dr Merritt told the outlet.
The patient, who
was in her 70s, was diagnosed in the summer soon after the heatwave that Dr
Merritt says directly contributed to making her ailment worse.
“She has diabetes.
She has some heart failure .… She lives in a trailer, no air conditioning,” he
said. “All of her health problems have all been worsened. And she’s really
struggling to stay hydrated.”
The diagnosis from
Dr Merritt has led to other doctors in the province launching an initiative
called Doctors and Nurses for Planetary Health.
Healthcare
professionals are using the group to advocate for better health by protecting
the environment, they said on the website.
“We are deeply
concerned about the climate crisis and its impact on health,” the group’s
website said. “This summer, our patients experienced extreme weather events of
heat dome, drought, and severe wildfires.”
World leaders at
the Cop26 summit in Glasgow have been pushing for stricter climate action
targets to prevent more extreme impacts in the coming years and the pledges
have reduced the projected emissions below 2°C for the first time.
However, climate
experts have warned this isn’t enough.
FULL ARTICLE AT: https://www.independent.co.uk/climate-change/news/canada-climate-change-diagnoses-patient-b1953355.html
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