Biodiversity and Human Health Biodiversity and Human Health   Field researcher inspects a deer mouse for signs of hantavirus

 

FOR PHYSICIANS

The changing face of global ecosystems is having a profound impact on the health trends in human populations around the world. From increasing rates of skin cancer to more frequent bouts of asthma, the damages mankind has inflicted on the natural order of the planet are now boomeranging back to become threats to all of us.

Physicians and other care givers can:

Choose a topic from the menu buttons to the right or visit our Ecology Library for other ideas. You can also look up terms in our Ecology Dictionary.

Bioterrorism:

What physicians need to know about the most common biological weapons that may potentially be employed by terrorists.

In the News:

  • Links Between Air Pollution and Human Health Clarified. Researchers found that increases in fine airborne particles known as particulates (largely from fossil fuel combustion) substantially increases the risk of death from cardiopulmonary disease and lung cancer.
  • Doctors want problem kids blood checked for lead. Lead is a neurotoxin that has been blamed for a variety of learning problems in children. Screening children with behavior problems could help to pinpoint the cause and prevent further damage to the child's nervous system. "We argue that this group of children should be routinely screened for lead," Gill Lewendon said in a report in the journal Archives of Disease in Childhood.
  • Ozone depletion increases skin cancer risk. Regardless of current causes for the rise in skin cancer, most research agrees that current and future increases in ultraviolet radiation exposure due to ozone depletion will tend to exacerbate the trend toward higher incidence rates of melanoma.

 

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