Il 2024 è stato l'anno più caldo mai registrato. In Europa nei mesi estivi decine di migliaia di vittime: al primo posto noi italiani

Uno studio di #ISGlobal stima che i morti a causa del caldo dall'1/6 al 30/9 siano stati 62.775, il 23,6% in più del 2023. I risultati sono su #NatureMedicine.
Al primo posto per decessi per le alte temperature estive noi italiani, con oltre 19.000 persone decedute, poi spagnoli, 6.700, Germania (6.300) e Grecia (6.000).

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41591-025-03954-7

@salute

Heat-related mortality in Europe during 2024 and health emergency forecasting to reduce preventable deaths - Nature Medicine

Analyses of 2024 daily mortality data from 654 regions in 32 European countries identified 62,775 heat-related deaths and informed a real-time early warning model that predicts heat-related health emergencies at least 1 week in advance.

Nature

Cities need more tree cover to cope with climate change. The question is also which trees will be able to cope with climate change and who will benefit from new tree planting...
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RT @ISGLOBALorg
🌳A new study published in @TheLancet and led by #ISGlobal estimates that one third of deaths attributable to heat islands in cities during the summer could be avoided if trees covered 30% of urban space.

(Thread👇🧵)

#GreenSpaces #UrbanHealt
https://twitter.com/ISGLOBALorg/status/1620692709135745024

ISGlobal on Twitter

“🌳A new study published in @TheLancet and led by #ISGlobal estimates that one third of deaths attributable to heat islands in cities during the summer could be avoided if trees covered 30% of urban space. (Thread👇🧵) #GreenSpaces #UrbanHealth”

Twitter

#People in Greener #Neighborhoods Have Significantly Better #MentalHealth, #Study Finds - EcoWatch

#Research led by #ISGlobal, the #Barcelona Institute for Global #Health, found that #residents of the #city had better markers for #mental #wellbeing when their #living situations met certain criteria for access to #greenery, yet fewer than 5 percent of city residents actually enjoyed that access.

https://www.ecowatch.com/green-neighborhoods-mental-health.html

People in Greener Neighborhoods Have Significantly Better Mental Health, Study Finds

A growing body of research suggests that spending time in nature has positive impacts on human bodies and minds.

EcoWatch