Health and climate change

Sharon Cradle.

Climate change has been named by The Lancet as the biggest threat to human health, but also as the greatest opportunity for change, with the Australian Medical Association and various health bodies describing climate change as a health emergency.

But what does this mean for the people of Noosa? At the next Friday Environment Forum on 10 May Dr Sharon Campbell will draw on the latest science to explore the connection between climate change and human health—from the impact of extreme events through to the spread of infectious disease and the impact of climate change on mental health—and outline what you can do to reduce your climate impact and protect your health.

Sharon is an academic researcher in climate change and health, and a fellow of the Healthy Environments and Lives (HEAL) Network. Her research focusses on the health impacts of extreme events such as heatwaves and bushfires, while working out what communities and individuals can do to protect their health in the face of a rapidly changing climate.

Everyone is welcome to the Friday Forum on 10 May at the Noosa Parks Association Environment Centre, 5 Wallace Drive, Noosaville. The forum starts at 10.30am and morning tea is available at 10-10.25am. Entry is $5 by tap and go at the door which includes morning tea/coffee.

Join the bird observers at 8.30am in the carpark for interpretive birding.

For more information, visit noosaparks.org.au