The groundbreaking and far - reaching educational recommendations for climate change and health curricula aim to expand the numbers of health professionals equipped to recognize and respond to the health challenges of a warming climate,
including deadly heat waves, flooding, air pollution, and wildfires; greater spread of disease vectors like ticks and mosquitos; and growing food and drinking water insecurity.
Not exact matches
TURNING UP THE
HEAT People living in regions of India, including Rajasthan where this image was taken, will experience extreme and potentially deadly heat waves by the end of the century, a new study sh
HEAT People living in regions of India,
including Rajasthan where this image was taken, will experience extreme and potentially
deadly heat waves by the end of the century, a new study sh
heat waves by the end of the century, a new study shows.
The existential threats could
include species extinctions and major threats to human water and food supplies in addition to the health risks posed by exposing over 7 billion people worldwide to
deadly heat.
However, under business - as - usual scenarios, without significant reductions in carbon emissions, the study shows these
deadly heat waves could begin within as little as a few decades to strike regions of India, Pakistan, and Bangladesh,
including the fertile Indus and Ganges river basins that produce much of the region's food supply.
Titles
include: «The Postman Always Rings Twice,» «Mildred Pierce,» «Leave Her to Heaven,» «Out of the Past,» «Pandora's Box,» «Niagara,» «Angel Face» «The Killers,» «Gilda,» «The Lady from Shanghai,» «Scarlet Street,» «Murder, My Sweet,» «The Maltese Falcon,» «Kiss Me
Deadly,» «The Killing,» «Gun Crazy,» «Detour,» «Dead Reckoning,» «Pitfall,» «Sudden Fear,» «Tension,» «Body
Heat,» «Fatal Attraction,» «The Strange Love of Martha Ivers,» «Too Late for Tears» and the prototype for the genre, «Double Indemnity.»
This study seems to conflict with Kunkel et al. (1996), which found that evaporation from corn agriculture significantly increased the «sensible
heat» of Midwest summers,
including the
deadly 1995 Chicago
heat wave.