Chatelaine_April_May_2019

(Nancy Kaufman) #1

APRIL/MAY 1019 • CHATELAINE 53


ina Mawson stood at her living room window
in July 2017, watching water bombers fill up
to battle the forest fires closing in on her
home. She knew she had to get her family out
of town—fast. Two giant plumes of smoke
had joined in the sky like a grey-scale rain-
bow over Williams Lake, B.C., and Mawson,
who has asthma, was having trouble breath-

ing. She worried about her family, especially her 11-month-old


daughter, who also suffers from asthma. “We were surrounded


by fire and smoke,” she says. “It was terrifying.”


Four days after the fires broke out, Mawson and her husband

shut down their legal practice and packed up their cars. They


left Williams Lake shortly before the official evacuation order


forced 24,000 people from their homes. As Mawson squeezed


family photos and special stuffed animals into her husband’s


car with their two daughters and two dogs, her head pounded


and her face was turning purple—she couldn’t get enough oxy-


gen from the ash-heavy air.


As they drove away, she was overcome with a mix of emotion:


relief that they were getting out alive, fear that their home would


be incinerated and frustration that more wasn’t being done to


tackle climate change. “I just wanted to be out,” she says. “That’s


all I could think about.”


Even if your lungs haven’t been compromised by forest fire


smoke, no matter where you live in Canada, climate change is


putting your health at risk. Stronger heat waves and increasing


air pollution are sending hundreds of people to the hospital


every year. At the same time, bugs are moving into newly warm


regions, bringing debilitating diseases with them.


A 2017 Health Canada poll found that 79 percent of Canadians

accept that climate change is happening; of those, just over half


think it’s a health risk now and 40 percent agree it will be in the


future. The truth is, climate change is already exacerbating pre-


existing conditions and making otherwise healthy people sick.


“Climate change is a public health emergency,” says

Courtney Howard, an emergency room doctor in Yellowknife


and president of the Canadian Association of Physicians for


the Environment. “This is a climate code blue. When a code


blue is called in the hospital, we don’t panic. We walk quickly


to the bedside of the person who needs help. We push hard,


we push fast—and we don’t stop until we have the healthiest


outcome possible.”


The Lancet calls climate change “the biggest global health

threat of the 21st century” and says tackling it could be our


greatest health opportunity. “We need to adapt to the prob-


lems; we can no longer avoid them,” says Howard, who authored


the Canadian section of The Lancet’s recent report on the


health impacts of climate change. Fortunately, there’s plenty


we can do to protect ourselves. Here’s how climate change is


affecting your health—and what you can do to fight back.


The air we breathe is more polluted than ever


In Canada, we’re lucky to breathe some of the cleanest air in the


world, but according to Health Canada, human-caused air pol-


lution still claims 14,400 lives every year—more than twice as


many as diabetes.


While we’ve made gains in regulating and reducing air-borne
toxins in Canada—phasing out coal power, for instance—climate
change is ushering in longer and more severe episodes of air pol-
lution. The worst offenders are wildfire smoke and periods of
high ground-level ozone, a toxic gas that forms when pollutants
interact with sunlight and worsens in warmer weather.
Not only are wildfire seasons getting longer, the fires are also
burning in more areas. “As the climate changes, we expect wild-
fires will cause episodes of the worst air quality most people will
ever experience,” says Sarah Henderson, a senior scientist at
the B.C. Centre for Disease Control.
Exposure to wildfire smoke can cause everything from head-
aches and coughing to heart attacks and life-threatening
asthma. When Henderson and her colleagues compared the
2017 and 2018 wildfire seasons to 2016, they found an 18 percent
increase in physician visits for asthma and a 38 percent increase
in prescriptions filled for Ventolin inhalers. “It doesn’t ta ke too
much smoke for some people to feel the effects,” Henderson
says. Symptoms typically resolve once the smoke clears, but the
long-term consquences are unknown.
Inhaling ground-level ozone, a significant contributor to smog,
also causes breathing problems such as coughing and throat
irritation. It can exacerbate lung conditions, leading to hospi-
talization and even death. Poor air quality in general has been
associated with several adverse health effects, including heart
disease and cancer. Seniors, children and pregnant women are
especially vulnerable, and air pollution has been linked to low
birth weight and premature birth.

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