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Imperatives and co-benefits of research into climate change and neurological disease
Clinical impacts and solutions
Published: 20 January 2025
Date (DD-MM-YYYY)
30-05-2025 to 30-05-2026
Available on-demand until 30th May 2026
Cost
Free
Education type
Article
CPD subtype
On-demand
Description
Evidence suggests that anthropogenic climate change is accelerating and is affecting human health globally. Despite urgent calls to address health effects in the context of the additional challenges of environmental degradation, biodiversity loss and ageing populations, the effects of climate change on specific health conditions are still poorly understood. Neurological diseases contribute substantially to the global burden of disease, and the possible direct and indirect consequences of climate change for people with these conditions are a cause for concern. Unaccustomed temperature extremes can impair the systems of resilience of the brain, thereby exacerbating or increasing susceptibility to neurological disease. In this Perspective, we explore how changing weather patterns resulting from climate change affect sleep — an essential restorative human brain activity, the quality of which is important for people with neurological diseases. We also consider the pervasive and complex influences of climate change on two common neurological conditions: stroke and epilepsy. We highlight the urgent need for research into the mechanisms underlying the effects of climate change on the brain in health and disease. We also discuss how neurologists can respond constructively to the climate crisis by raising awareness and promoting mitigation measures and research — actions that will bring widespread co-benefits.
Contact details
Email address
Telephone number
0207 8334000

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