Friday, September 20, 2024

Global Youth Are Correct To Worry About Climate Change -With News Of Adverse Effects On Brains. Mental Health

 

                           These youngsters have a right to complain.

The latest warning regarded the fragmentation of youngsters (age 12- 25) mental health appeared in the latest issue of New Scientist (24 August, p.14) noting the role of social media overuse (5 hrs. a day) but also increasing "eco-anxiety" from climate change. Most astounding, we learn in England for example, up to 1 in 5 kids aged 8 to 16 have a "probable mental health condition."  

 The bullying aspect of social media we all know too well, e.g.


Among those is the increase in dread tropical diseases - like dengue fever as mosquitoes migrate north with warmer temperatures, i.e.


As well as more frequent invasions of brains by parasites, like the tape worm and its larvae, e.g.


In the case of Taenia solium, or the tapeworm,  before the worms become adults they spend time as larvae in large cysts, which may find their way into the brain (see image) and cause a condition known as neurocysticercosis. Lowball estimates suggest 5 million cases of epilepsy arising from this condition, worldwide. The numbers are increasing as the worm -cyst invasion of the human body is increasing. (See the excellent monograph, Parasite Rex).  Most of the cases, understandably, are in the less developed world, but that is changing as hotter temperatures become the norm in the developed nations.

All of these, not to mention increasing potential for more frequent heat death, possible collapse of power girds, little access to water, add up to major anxiety for our kids.  According to the New Scientist piece, "global warming is especially concerning for young people, who have more years ahead of them than older people."

So I have tons of sympathy for my 20-something nieces and nephews who will have to live in an ever more intolerable hothouse world - overcome by heat as well as endless monster hurricanes, tornadoes,  floods - as well as diseases and pests - while I might have barely 5 years left if I'm lucky. So I am likely to avoid the worst of it.

The piece also adds: "Beyond existential worries, exposure to extreme heat in early childhood has been linked to brain changes which may harm mental health."

That according to Emma Lawrance of Imperial College, London. Thus, adverse effect on the young brain can go even beyond increasing parasite infestation. A yen to live to 100 like the age defying nincompoops plan to? No way.

See Also:

by Tarique Niazi | September 18, 2024 - 5:27am | permalink

— from Foreign Policy In Focus

Bangladesh was still reeling from political turmoil, which felled Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina’s government on August 5, when a flood disaster struck out of the blue, upending the lives of six million Bangladeshis. Half a million people were left to their own devices, beyond the reach of first responders. Worst of all, two million children were exposed to the aftermath of flooding. Dhaka had not seen a deluge like this in the past three decades. Yet the country is no stranger to disasters. Just in May this year, it was battered by Storm Remal, devastating millions. In 2023, it was Cyclone Mocha that visited its wrath on two neighboring states: Bangladesh and Myanmar.

The speed and severity of flash floods is equally quick to inflame geopolitical tensions, as Dhaka accused neighboring India aggravating the situation by opening the floodgates of a dam in a neighboring state. India denied the charge and blamed erratic monsoons for swelling the transboundary Gomati River that overflowed its banks. Bangladesh and India share 54 transboundary rivers, including the Ganges and Yamuna. As an upstream country, India is viewed with suspicion by downstream Bangladesh. All downstream nations suspect their upstream neighbors in the event of such calamities. For its part, India blames upstream China for major diversions on transboundary rivers. Similar accusations are heard among 11 riparian nations on the Nile. All this shows how climate change shapes geopolitics.

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by Stan Cox | September 18, 2024 - 5:22am | permalink

— from TomDispatch

The most pressing environmental crisis of these times, our heating of the Earth through carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gas pollution, is closely connected to our excessive energy consumption. And with many of the ways we use that energy, we’re also producing another less widely discussed pollutant: industrial noise. Like greenhouse-gas pollution, noise pollution is degrading our world—and it’s not just affecting our bodily and mental health but also the health of ecosystems on which we depend utterly.

Noise pollution, a longstanding menace, is often ignored. It has, however, been making headlines in recent years, thanks to the booming development of massive, boxy, windowless buildings filled with computer servers that process data and handle internet traffic. Those servers generate extreme amounts of heat, the removal of which requires powerful water-chilling equipment. That includes arrays of large fans that, in turn, generate a thunderous wall of noise. Such installations, known by the innocuous term “data centers,” are making growing numbers of people miserable.

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