
COVID-19 and Climate: Implications for Public Health
What can the spread of coronavirus teach us about the spread of climate change? With increased human development encroaching into wildlife areas, should communities be preparing for more pandemics?
Climate One · Climate One from The Commonwealth Club
April 17, 202054m 52s
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Show Notes
What can the spread of coronavirus teach us about the spread of climate change? Both crises have global reach, invisible perpetrators, and require aggressive, early action for containment. But while an infectious disease is acute and deeply personal, the impacts of a changing climate are systemic and vague. Scientists point out that the coronavirus family — which includes COVID-19 and SARS — originated as an animal disease that can be passed along to humans. With increased human development encroaching into wildlife areas, should communities be preparing for more pandemics?
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Guests:
Brian Allan, Associate Entomology Professor, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Aaron Bernstein, Interim Director, The Center for Climate, Health, and the Global Environment, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health (Harvard C-CHANGE)
Barbara Gottlieb, Director of Environment and Health, Physicians for Social Responsibility
Additional interviews:
Jason Rohr, Professor at the University of Notre Dame
This program was recorded at the Commonwealth Club in San Francisco on April 3, 2020.
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