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Public Perceptions of Climate Change as a Human Health Risk: Surveys of the United States, Canada and Malta

机译:对气候变化作为人类健康风险的公众看法:对美国,加拿大和马耳他的调查

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We used data from nationally representative surveys conducted in the United States, Canada and Malta between 2008 and 2009 to answer three questions: Does the public believe that climate change poses human health risks, and if so, are they seen as current or future risks? Whose health does the public think will be harmed? In what specific ways does the public believe climate change will harm human health? When asked directly about the potential impacts of climate change on health and well-being, a majority of people in all three nations said that it poses significant risks; moreover, about one third of Americans, one half of Canadians, and two-thirds of Maltese said that people are already being harmed. About a third or more of people in the United States and Canada saw themselves (United States, 32%; Canada, 67%), their family (United States, 35%; Canada, 46%), and people in their community (United States, 39%; Canada, 76%) as being vulnerable to at least moderate harm from climate change. About one third of Maltese (31%) said they were most concerned about the risk to themselves and their families. Many Canadians said that the elderly (45%) and children (33%) are at heightened risk of harm, while Americans were more likely to see people in developing countries as being at risk than people in their own nation. When prompted, large numbers of Canadians and Maltese said that climate change can cause respiratory problems (78–91%), heat-related problems (75–84%), cancer (61–90%), and infectious diseases (49–62%). Canadians also named sunburn (79%) and injuries from extreme weather events (73%), and Maltese cited allergies (84%). However, climate change appears to lack salience as a health issue in all three countries: relatively few people answered open-ended questions in a manner that indicated clear top-of-mind associations between climate change and human health risks. We recommend mounting public health communication initiatives that increase the salience of the human health consequences associated with climate change.
机译:我们使用了2008年至2009年在美国,加拿大和马耳他进行的全国代表性调查的数据来回答三个问题:公众是否相信气候变化会构成人类健康风险,如果这样,它们是否被视为当前或未来的风险?公众认为谁的健康会受到伤害?公众认为气候变化将以何种具体方式危害人类健康?当直接问到气候变化对健康和福祉的潜在影响时,所有三个国家的大多数人都说这构成了重大风险;此外,大约三分之一的美国人,一半的加拿大人和三分之二的马耳他人说,人们已经受到伤害。在美国和加拿大,大约三分之一或更多的人看到自己(美国,占32%;加拿大,占67%),家人(美国,占35%;加拿大,占46%)和社区中的人们(美国州(39%;加拿大(76%))至少易受气候变化的伤害。约三分之一的马耳他人(31%)说,他们最担心自己和家人面临的风险。许多加拿大人说,老年人(45%)和儿童(33%)受伤害的风险更高,而美国人比发展中国家的人更有可能看到发展中国家的人处于危险之中。当出现提示时,大量加拿大人和马耳他人表示,气候变化会导致呼吸系统疾病(78–91%),与热有关的问题(75–84%),癌症(61–90%)和传染病(49–62) %)。加拿大人还命名为晒伤(79%)和极端天气事件造成的伤害(73%),马耳他人提到过敏(84%)。但是,在这三个国家中,气候变化似乎都不是一个健康问题,因为很少有人以表明气候变化与人类健康风险之间存在明显的首要联系的方式回答了开放性问题。我们建议增加公共卫生沟通计划,以提高与气候变化相关的人类健康后果的重要性。

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