10-26-2022, 03:15 PM
For six months, homes in Ukraine's southern coastal city of Mykolaiv have been without clean drinking water. Salas, an emergency medical physician at Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School, is one of nearly 100 authors who contributed to the prestigious medical journal’s annual report on climate change and health. There are some hopeful signs. The report notes growth in renewable energy investment, increasing media coverage of climate change and growing engagement from government leaders on health-centered climate policies. But the report warns that inequities could weaken progress.
8411 6368 664 5696 7380 3983 7631 2221 612 6939 939 1620 7066 2869 9019 8334 8321 2578 9232 509 6927 1645 576 7097 8139 8125 642 8087 7355 9500 5379 6920 8115 1714 2786 3595 7998 7828 4099 4908 2263 6410 8596 3058 7580 8691 597 4686 694 1887 9737 6951 9353 2653 8158 7654 5379 2361
Fetterman's performance reinforced questions about his recovery from a May stroke St. Louis police on Tuesday showed an image of the rifle used by Orlando Harris, who died after he exchanged fire with authorities. As in previous reports, the 2022 Lancet Countdown paints a grim picture of how climate change is threatening people’s health and the care systems that are supposed to help manage it, calling its latest findings the “direst” yet. This year’s report leaves little ambiguity about who the doctors view as responsible for the harms and stresses they feel in clinics.
.
.
.
8411 6368 664 5696 7380 3983 7631 2221 612 6939 939 1620 7066 2869 9019 8334 8321 2578 9232 509 6927 1645 576 7097 8139 8125 642 8087 7355 9500 5379 6920 8115 1714 2786 3595 7998 7828 4099 4908 2263 6410 8596 3058 7580 8691 597 4686 694 1887 9737 6951 9353 2653 8158 7654 5379 2361
Fetterman's performance reinforced questions about his recovery from a May stroke St. Louis police on Tuesday showed an image of the rifle used by Orlando Harris, who died after he exchanged fire with authorities. As in previous reports, the 2022 Lancet Countdown paints a grim picture of how climate change is threatening people’s health and the care systems that are supposed to help manage it, calling its latest findings the “direst” yet. This year’s report leaves little ambiguity about who the doctors view as responsible for the harms and stresses they feel in clinics.
.
.
.