Rising Heat: A New Barrier to Global Physical Activity

A study indicates that climate change-induced rising temperatures could cause millions to become physically inactive by 2050. This shift might result in 700,000 additional premature deaths annually and $3.68 billion in productivity losses. The heat's impact on physical activity could hinder WHO's global health goals.

Rising Heat: A New Barrier to Global Physical Activity
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Rising temperatures due to climate change could render millions physically inactive by 2050, a new study suggests. The research, published in The Lancet Global Health journal, forecasts up to 700,000 premature deaths yearly and a staggering USD 3.68 billion productivity loss.

Researchers from Latin America, including the Pontifical Catholic University of Argentina, emphasize that soaring temperatures could significantly obstruct the World Health Organization's (WHO) target of reducing global physical inactivity by 15% by 2030.

The study calls for proactive measures, such as integrating heat-risk messages into exercise guidelines and investing in shade-rich active transport corridors, to mitigate the projected health and economic impacts.

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