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Pregnant people now a focus of climate change science

Latest IPCC report includes a section on climate change and maternal health. One of the lead authors explains why

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How climate change poses unique risks to pregnancy, according to the latest IPCC report

Heat, air pollution and natural disasters all have been shown to impact maternal and fetal health. Climate and health expert Kristie Ebi says we can take more measures to protect those affected.

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The latest climate report includes a new focus on pregnant people. One of its authors explains why.

A recently released installment of a report, focused on climate impacts, adaptation and vulnerabilities, included a new section detailing the risks pregnant people face in a changing climate.

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New IPCC report details risks pregnant people face due to climate change

Heat, air pollution and natural disasters all have been shown to impact maternal and fetal health. Climate and health expert Kristie Ebi says we can take more measures to protect those affected.

United-states , Arizona , Illinois , Jennifer-vanos , Kristie-ebi , Lauren-underwood , Arizona-state-university , National-institutes-of-health , Ipcc , Intergovernmental-panel-on-climate , Consortium-on-birth , Intergovernmental-panel-on-climate-change

Climate Crisis A Rising Threat to Maternal Health in the US


Mother’s Day in the United States is typically associated with spring, and new life.
But because of the climate crisis, Mother’s Day also heralds hotter summers with more and longer heat waves, worsening North Atlantic hurricane season, and terrifying wildfires in the months ahead. An increasingly important public health event – Heat Awareness Day – follows on May 31.
Climate impacts are expected to be more extreme again this year and threaten to worsen the maternal health crisis in the US. That crisis is marked by unjust inequities in maternal mortality, illness, and premature birth; with worse rates for Black, Indigenous, and other women of color than white women, and for women living in poverty compared to the better-off.

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HRW: 'Climate Crisis' Threatens Maternal Health in the U.S.


HRW: ‘Climate Crisis’ Threatens Maternal Health in the U.S.
6 May 2021
Human Rights Watch (HRW) warned Thursday extreme weather events caused by global warming pose a dire threat to maternal health in the U.S. especially for “women of color.”
“Climate impacts are expected to be more extreme again this year and threaten to worsen the maternal health crisis in the US,” writes Skye Wheeler of HRW’s Women’s Rights Division.
“That crisis is marked by unjust inequities in maternal mortality, illness, and premature birth,” Wheeler asserts, “with worse rates for Black, Indigenous, and other women of color than white women, and for women living in poverty compared to the better-off.”

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