In “The Coming 
 
Health Crisis,”
 
an article published 
 
in “The Scientist,” 
 
Samuel S. Myers, MD 
 
and Aaron Bernstein, MD 
 
of Harvard Medical School
 
in the USA discuss 
 
the effects on humans 
 
of what they call direct 
 
and indirect
 
climate change. 
 
Direct effects, 
 
which the authors say 
 
are more quantifiable, 
 
include the spread
 
of infectious disease, 
 
along with increasing 
 
heat stress and
 
air pollution effects 
 
such as heat stroke 
 
and respiratory illness. 
 
Indirect effects, 
 
which include water and 
 
food insecurities along 
 
with the forced migration 
 
of climate refugees, 
 
the authors cite as being 
 
even more problematic 
 
since they pose 
 
the greatest challenge 
 
to public health. 
 
Drs. Myers and Bernstein 
 
note that although 
 
the exact effects 
 
may not be known, 
 
humanity should 
 
still strive to minimize 
 
adverse health impacts. 
 
Their report states, 
 
“With evidence that 
 
climate change is already 
 
imposing 
 
a hefty health burden, 
 
the future climate, 
 
particularly if 
 
greenhouse-gas releases 
 
into the atmosphere go 
 
unabated, portends
 
health crises for hundreds 
 
of millions of people. 
 
Rather than be used as 
 
a rationale for inaction, 
 
the uncertainty inherent 
 
in climate science should 
 
serve as an organizing 
 
principle for adaptation 
 
to its ill effects.” 
 
They suggest such 
 
adaptations as developing 
 
new crop strains
 
for better food security 
 
as well as significantly 
 
increasing water storage 
 
capacity in areas where 
 
supplies are unstable. 
 
Our appreciation, 
 
Drs. Myers and Bernstein,
 
for raising awareness 
 
about the need to protect 
 
public health in the face 
 
of potentially devastating 
 
climate change. 
 
Let us act now 
 
in seeking more 
 
sustainable lifestyles 
 
to avoid such harmful 
 
outcomes and restore 
 
the Earth's natural balance. 
 
During a November 2010 
 
video message presented 
 
at a climate change 
 
conference 
 
in the United Kingdom, 
 
Supreme Master 
 
Ching Hai
 
made an urgent plea
 
for action on behalf 
 
of humanity and indeed, 
 
all the vulnerable beings 
 
on the planet.
 
Supreme Master 
 
Ching Hai
: I'm afraid 
 
the reality now 
 
is already too urgent. 
 
 
Scientists say 
 
that water security 
 
for about 80% of 
 
the world's people
 
is threatened due to 
 
drying and polluted 
 
river systems, 
 
shrinking glaciers 
 
from South America 
 
to the Himalayas, and 
 
groundwater levels that 
 
fall lower and lower 
 
each year. 
 
In 2009, for the first time, 
 
the number of people 
 
suffering from hunger 
 
exceeded 1 billion, 
 
while disasters threatened 
 
the food security
 
of many more. 
 
So please consider what 
 
is really at stake now, 
 
what is really our 
 
foremost,urgent priority 
 
at the present time. 
 
It's not just political 
 
reputation or economy - 
 
it's the lives, real lives, 
 
of all inhabitants on 
 
Earth: humans, animals, 
 
plants, trees, etc.
 
An organic vegan diet 
 
would immensely improve 
 
the quality of our lives;
 
spiritually also. 
 
It can curb the water 
 
and food crises 
 
and restore nature's 
 
life-support systems. 
 
It also happens 
 
to be the most rapid, 
 
cost-effective, 
 
and the only feasible 
 
climate solution, 
 
one that every nation 
 
can easily implement. 
http://www.the-scientist.com/article/display/57882/#ixzz19vju8cHq