Outgoing WHO regional director Shigeru Omi said that while they have been successful in dealing with controlling diseases, focus should shift to addressing "global health security" arising from global warming. "A warmer planet has contributed to some diseases, such as dengue, now occurring in areas where it was never seen before," Omi said in a statement. "Heat waves and droughts are among the many factors contributing to the current food crisis," he added. "Rising oceans could soon threaten our low-lying island states and areas in the Pacific."
A draft paper being discussed at the conference called for a regional framework of action to protect human health from climate change. The paper said health risks include heat stress, waterborne and food-borne diseases associated with extreme weather events and malnutrition. "These risks and diseases are not new, and the health sector already is tackling these problems," the paper noted. "However, the capacity to cope with potentially increasing levels of these risks and diseases is limited, particularly in developing countries."
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