Failure to agree a new UN climate deal in December will bring a ‘global health catastrophe’, say 18 of the world’s professional medical organisations. Writing in The Lancet and the British Medical Journal, they urge doctors to ‘take a lead’ on the climate issue. In a separate editorial, the journals say that people in poor tropical nations will suffer the worst impacts. They argue that curbing climate change would have other benefits such as more healthy diets and cleaner air. December’s UN summit, to be held in Copenhagen, is due to agree a new global climate treaty to supplant the Kyoto Protocol. But preparatory talks have been plagued by lack of agreement on how much to cut greenhouse gas emissions and how to finance climate protection for the poorest countries. ‘ Effects of climate change on health will… put the lives and wellbeing of billions of people at increased risk  Lancet/UCL report ‘There is a real danger that politicians will be indecisive, especially in such turbulent economic times as these,’ according to the letter signed by leaders of 18 colleges of medicine and other medical disciplines across the world. ‘Should their response […]

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