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The most important health effects from future climate change are projected to include: increases in summer heat related mortality (deaths) and morbidity (illness); decreases in winter cold related mortality and morbidity; changes in the disease burden e.g. from vector-, water- or food-borne disease; increases in the risk of accidents and wider well being from extreme events (storms and floods). The PESETA health project has assessed these effects in Europe. These include both positive and negative effects on health, and show strong patterns of regional variation across Europe. The analysis has undertaken a detailed bottom-up analysis of summer and winter temperature-related mortality, as well as of food borne disease in Europe. Finally, the study has progressed an initial analysis of the mental health effects of coastal flooding (linking the output from one of the other PESETA sectoral projects), which shows that under high sea level rise scenarios, the number of cases and economic costs could also be significant. A consideration of adaptation, whether through addressing heat exposure, through control of food borne disease, or through flood protection, shows that it offers significant reductions in impacts at potentially low cost. A number of possible policy responses are also identified. The most important of these relate to further extension or refinement of the heat health warning systems emerging in Europe.
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JRC IPTS
Published in Climate-ADAPT: Jun 7, 2016
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