Jen Speers at home during her pregnancy while the air was filled
with bushfire smoke. (Supplied: Spears family) |
Key Points
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"It was a very nervous time because we'd heard reports of babies that had trouble breathing or were born underweight," she said.
"When they inspected the placenta, it was the placenta of a heavy smoker, which I'm not. I've never smoked a day in my life."
Her daughter Mia was born early but healthy, although it's unclear what the long-term health impacts for babies like her will be.
"You worry for her and her development, because when they're tiny babies, they can't tell you if something's wrong," Ms Spears said.
Jen Spears was pregnant with her daughter Mia during the
bushfires.(ABC News: Jess Davis)
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Further up the NSW coast at Moruya, Dr Michael Holland saw more immediate and devastating impacts on his patients. "Personally, I saw in that period of time, three full-term stillbirths," he said.
Dr Michael Holland believes bushfire smoke had negative impacts
on a number of pregnancies during the Black Summer. (ABC News: Jess Davis)
|
He believes around 15,000 births on the east coast of New South Wales have been exposed to conditions that could leave lasting consequences.
"We know that the incidence of high blood pressure in pregnancy, gestational diabetes in pregnancy, low birth weight of babies and preterm birth are all increased by this air pollution," he said.
Never-ending cycle of disasters
A man trapped on his roof near Woodburn in northern NSW this
week.
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"This is a stark reminder of the impacts of climate change in our immediate vicinity here in Australia," Professor Kathryn Bowen, a lead author on the UN report, said.
"Climate change is a threat to human health and wellbeing and the health of the planet.
"Any further delay in concerted global action will miss a really brief and rapidly closing window to secure a livable future."
While natural disasters bring imminent danger to people's lives, the IPCC report warns climate change will lead to increased deaths and illness from heat, malnutrition, malaria and gastro, as well as increasing threats to mental health.
"One thing that we're seeing now is what we're calling cascading and compounding impacts," Professor Bowen said.
"For example, the Black Summer in Australia was preceded by severe droughts and then the summer fires were followed by floods in some places.
"These compounding and cascading impacts really affect individuals and society's ability to recover as often there's little time between the onset of these shocks."
The report warns that heat in Australia will reach the limit of human survivability, with parts of northern Australia becoming uninhabitable and that rural communities will face increased stress.
Rural communities vulnerable
Debbie Wilmot says the drought and bushfires had an impact on her
health. (ABC News: Jon Daly)
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"The drought was horrendous," she said.
"The heartbreaking stories that we got from our farmers and our locals, it just was gut wrenching."
Water had to be trucked into this town in southern Queensland for 18 months after it ran out of supply in 2018, before bushfires shrouded the town in smoke the following year after years of drought.
"I'm a chronic asthmatic and the dry and the dust and the smoke and the bushfires really had an impact on my health," Ms Wilmot said.
"Being out in regional areas, you don't have access to a lot of health professionals."
Dr Dan Halliday says regional health services need more resources
and funding. (ABC News: Jon Daly)
|
He wants to see regional and rural healthcare bolstered to cope with increasing acute and chronic illnesses.
"What we're seeing is that we're providing a just-in-time service for rural remote areas," Dr Halliday said.
"Realistically, if we don't have the resourcing and funding to actually go into our rural and remote communities, who are going to be the most vulnerable in terms of climate change, we are going to see ongoing challenges going forward."
Strengthening health systems
Jen Spears says authorities need to do more to tackle climate
change. (ABC News: Jess Davis) |
"There's a very large gap in our adaptation efforts to date. National Planning on a health and climate change is advancing," Professor Kathryn Bowen said.
"For example, the Victorian government released its health adaptation plan earlier this year, but implementing these plans is key and remains challenging.
Tim Winton is the latest Perth Festival artist to denounce
Woodside's Scarborough gas project in WA, as well as the fossil
fuel company's sponsorship of an arts festival event.
Read more |
"If you have people who already have chronic respiratory or cardiac diseases, they will be the first affected. However, it also severely affects the areas with the least resources and that is our rural and remote areas."
In a statement, a spokesperson for federal Health Minister Greg Hunt said the government's Climate and Resilience Adaptation Strategy, released last year, includes health system considerations and is designed to support governments, communities and businesses to better adapt.
The statement said climate change was a global challenge and all countries, including Australia, needed to take action.
But Jen Spears said authorities can't wait for more victims before they act.
"You hope that maybe today will be the day that they take it seriously," she said.
"My daughter is maybe the first generation to be impacted in this country.
"We need to start taking stock of what's important to us as Australians. If it's not the health and wellbeing of our most vulnerable, like our babies, our children, what's the point?"
Links
- (USA Psychology Today) How Climate Change Affects Our Brains
- (AU The Conversation) Our Hospitals Are At Greater Risk Of Flooding As The Climate Changes. We Need Better Evacuation Plans.
- (UK Independent) Climate Crisis Increasing Risk Of Premature Birth And Childhood Illness
- (Japan Times) Climate Change Is Also A Very Real Public Health Emergency
- (Forbes) Climate Change And Health: A Heart Specialist’s Notes On How A Warming Planet Impacts Our Health And Wellbeing
- (CNBC) Yale Psychologist: How To Cope In A World Of Climate Disasters, Trauma And Anxiety
- 'Managed retreat' from coastal living could soon be reality, climate report warns
-
Tim Winton says Australia's climate change approach a 'dumpster
fire of business as usual'
- Jen thought she'd done everything right to protect her unborn baby from bushfire smoke
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