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The link between climate change, health and poverty

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    I arrived in the US from Kingston, Jamaica
    in the summer of '68.
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    My family of six crammed into a small,
    two-bedroom apartment
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    in a three-story walk-up in Brooklyn.
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    The block had several children --
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    some spoke Spanish,
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    some spoke English.
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    Initially, I wasn't allowed
    to play with them
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    because, as my parents said,
    "Them too rambunctious" --
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    (Laughter)
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    so I could only watch them from my window.
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    Rollerskating was one
    of their favorite activities.
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    They loved hitching a ride
    at the back of the city bus,
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    letting go of the rear bumper
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    as the bus arrived
    at the bottom of the block
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    in front of my building.
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    One day there was a new girl with them.
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    I heard the usual squeals of laughter
    interspersed with, "Mira, mira!
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    Mira, mira!"
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    Spanish for, "Look, look!"
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    The group grabbed onto the back
    of the bus at the top of the block,
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    and as they rolled down laughing
    and screaming, "Mira, mira, mira, mira,"
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    the bus abruptly stopped.
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    The experienced riders
    adjusted and quickly let go,
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    but the new girl lurched back
    and fell onto the pavement.
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    She didn't move.
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    The adults outside ran to help her.
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    The bus driver came out
    to see what had happened
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    and call for an ambulance.
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    There was blood coming from her head.
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    She didn't open her eyes.
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    We waited for the ambulance,
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    and waited,
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    and everyone said,
    "Where is the ambulance?
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    Where is the ambulance?"
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    The police finally arrived.
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    An older black American said,
    "Ain't no ambulance coming."
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    He said it again loudly to the cop.
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    "You know ain't no ambulance coming.
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    They never send no ambulance here."
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    The cop looked at my neighbors
    who were getting frustrated,
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    lifted the girl into the patrol car
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    and left.
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    I was 10 years old at the time.
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    I knew this wasn't right.
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    I knew that there was something
    more we could do.
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    The something I could do
    was become a doctor.
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    I became an internist
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    and committed my career to caring
    for those we often call the underserved,
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    the vulnerable,
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    like those neighbors I had
    when I first immigrated to America.
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    During my early training years
    in Harlem in the '80s,
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    I saw a shocking increase
    in young men with HIV.
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    Then when I moved to Miami,
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    I noticed HIV included women and children,
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    primarily, poor black and brown people.
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    Within a few years, an infection
    seen in a select population
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    became a worldwide epidemic.
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    Again I got the urge to do something.
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    Fortunately, with the help of activists
    and advocates and educators
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    and physicians like me
    who treat the disease,
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    we found a way forward.
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    There was a massive education effort
    to reduce HIV transmission
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    and provide legal protection
    for those with the disease.
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    There was a political will to make sure
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    that as many patients
    as possible worldwide,
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    regardless of ability to pay,
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    could get access to medication.
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    Within a couple of decades
    there were new treatments
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    that transformed this life-threatening
    infection to a chronic disease,
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    like diabetes.
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    Now there's a vaccine on the horizon.
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    Over the last five to seven years,
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    I've noticed a different epidemic
    among the patients in Florida,
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    and it looks something like this.
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    [Ms. Anna-May], a retired clerical worker
    living on a fixed income in Opa-locka,
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    walked in for medication refills.
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    She had common chronic conditions
    of high blood pressure, diabetes,
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    heart disease and asthma
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    with overlapping chronic
    obstructive pulmonary disease --
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    COPD.
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    [Ms. Anna-May] was one
    of my more adherent patients
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    so I was surprised she needed refills
    of her breathing medicines
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    earlier than usual.
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    Towards the end of the visit,
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    she handed me a Florida Power & Light form
    and asked me to sign it.
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    She was behind on her light bill.
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    This form allowed physicians
    to document serious medical conditions
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    requiring equipment that would be impacted
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    if the patient's electricity
    was disconnected.
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    "But [Ms. Annna-May]," I said,
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    "you don't use any medical
    devices for breathing.
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    I don't think you qualify."
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    Further questioning revealed
    she had been using her air conditioner
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    day and night because of the heat
    so she could breathe.
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    Needing to buy more asthma inhalers
    left her little money;
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    she couldn't pay all the bills
    so it piled up.
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    I filled out the form,
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    but knowing she might be denied,
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    I also sent her to the social worker.
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    Then there was [Jorge],
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    such a sweet, kind man
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    who often gifted our clinic
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    with some of the fruits he sold
    on the streets of Miami.
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    He had signs of worsening kidney function
    whenever he worked days on end
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    on those hot streets
    due to dehydration --
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    just not enough blood
    getting to the kidneys.
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    His kidneys were much better
    whenever he took some days off.
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    But with no other support,
    what could he do?
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    As he says, "Rain or shine,
    cold or heat, I have to work."
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    But the most damning case of all
    may be Ms. Sandra Faye Twiggs
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    of Ft. Lauderdale with COPD.
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    She was arrested after fighting
    with her daughter over a fan.
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    On her release from jail,
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    she returned to her apartment,
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    coughed nonstop
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    and died three days later.
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    Here's what else I noticed:
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    the data showed allergy seasons
    are starting weeks earlier,
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    nighttime temperatures are rising,
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    trees are growing faster
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    and mosquitos carrying dangerous
    diseases like Zika and dengue
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    are showing up in areas
    they didn't exist before.
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    I also see signs of impending
    climate gentrification.
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    That's when richer people move
    into poorer neighborhoods
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    that are at higher elevation
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    and less subject to flood damage
    from climate change.
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    Like in my patient Madame Marie
    who came in stressed and anxious
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    because she was evicted from her apartment
    in Miami's Little Haiti
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    to make room for a luxury
    apartment complex
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    whose developers understood
    that Little Haiti would not flood
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    because it's ten feet above sea level.
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    An undeniable, clear and consistent
    warming trend is on the way.
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    A health emergency even bigger
    than HIV/AIDS seems to be in the works,
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    and it was my low-income patients
    that were dropping clues
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    of what this would look like.
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    This new epidemic is climate change
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    and it has a variety of health effects.
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    Climate change impacts us
    in four major ways.
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    Directly, through heat, extreme
    weather and pollution;
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    through the spread of the disease;
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    through disruption of our food
    and water supply
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    and through disruption
    of our emotional well-being.
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    In medicine we use mnemonics
    to aid our memory,
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    and this mnemonic, "heatwave,"
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    shows the eight significant health
    effects of climate change.
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    H: heat illnesses.
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    E: Exacerbation of heart and lung disease.
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    A: Asthma worsening.
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    T: Traumatic injuries,
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    especially during extreme weather events.
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    W: water and foodborne illnesses.
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    A: Allergies worsening.
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    V: Vector-borne diseases spreading
    like Zika, dengue and Lyme.
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    And E: Emotional stresses increasing.
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    Poor, vulnerable people are already
    feeling the effects of climate change.
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    They are the proverbial
    canary in a coal mine.
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    Truly, their experiences
    are like oracles or prophecies.
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    The guiding light for us to pay attenion
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    that we are doing something to our world
    first that's hurting them first.
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    But in a matter of time,
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    we are next.
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    If we act together --
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    doctors, patients and other
    health profressionals -
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    we will find solutions.
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    We have done this with the HIV crisis.
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    [It] was thanks to the activism
    of patients with HIV
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    that demanded medications
    and better research,
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    and the collaboration
    of doctors and scientists
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    that we were able to control the epidemic.
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    And then it was thanks
    to international health agencies,
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    NGOs, politicians and
    pharmeceutical companies
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    that HIV medication became
    available in low-income countries.
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    There is no reason we can't also apply
    this model of collaboration
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    to address the health effects
    of climate change before it's too late.
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    Climate change is here.
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    It's already damaging the health
    and homes of poor people.
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    Like my patient [Jorge],
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    most of us will have to work,
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    whether rain or shine,
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    cold or heat.
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    But together these patients
    and their doctors, hand-in-hand,
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    with some basic tools,
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    can do so much to make
    this climate transition less brutal
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    for all of us.
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    The patients inspired me to found
    the clinicians' organization
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    to fight climate change.
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    We focus on understanding
    the health effects of climate change,
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    learning to advocate for patients
    with climate-related illnesses
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    and encouraging real-world solutions.
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    A recent Gallup study showed
    three of the most respected professions
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    are nurses, doctors and pharmacists.
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    So as respected members of society,
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    we have amplified voices
    to influence climate change policy
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    and politics.
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    There is so much we can do.
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    As clinicians, our many patient
    contacts allows us
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    to see things before others.
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    And this puts us in an ideal position
    to be on the frontlines of change.
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    We can teach climate-related illnesses
    in our health-professional schools.
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    We can collect data on our patients'
    climate-related conditions
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    by making sure there are billing
    codes to identify them.
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    We can do climate-related health research.
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    We can teach how to have
    green practices in homes.
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    We can advocate
    for our patient energy needs.
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    We can help them get safer homes.
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    We can help them get necessary
    equipment in those homes
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    when their conditions worsen.
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    We can testify in front of lawmakers
    as to the findings
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    and we can medically treat
    our patients' climate-related illnesses.
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    Most importantly, we can help prepare
    our patients mentally and physically
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    for the health challenges they will face,
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    using a model of medicine
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    that incorporates economic
    and social justice.
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    This would mean Ms. Sandra
    Faye Twiggs with COPD,
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    who died after being released from jail
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    after a fight with
    her daughter over a fan,
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    would have known that the heat
    in her apartment made her sick and angry
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    and seek a safer place to go for cooling.
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    Even better, her apartment
    would never have been so hot.
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    From the poor, I've learned our lives
    are not only vulnerable
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    but are stories of resilience,
    innovation and survival.
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    Like that wise old man
    who loudly spoke truth to the cop
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    that summer night:
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    "Ain't no ambulance coming,"
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    and compelled him to deliver
    that little girl to the hospital instead.
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    You know what?
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    Listen up.
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    If there's going to be a medical
    response to climate change,
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    it is not going to be
    just waiting for an ambulance.
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    It is going to happen because
    we the clinicians take the first step.
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    We make so much noise
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    that the issue cannot
    be ignored or misunderstood.
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    It is going to start
    with the stories our patients tell
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    and the stories we tell on their behalf.
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    We're going to do what is right
    for our patients like we've always done,
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    but also what is right
    for our environment,
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    for ourselves
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    and for all the people on this planet --
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    all of them.
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause and cheers)
Title:
The link between climate change, health and poverty
Speaker:
Cheryl Holder
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
12:12

English subtitles

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