Trump's climate health rollback likely will hit vulnerable communities the most, experts say

The Trump administration’s revocation of a scientific finding that climate change is a danger to public health is likely to affect communities of color the most. Extensive research has found that Black, Latino, Indigenous and other racial and ethnic groups are more vulnerable to the health consequences from climate change than white people. The Environmental Protection Agency, in a 2021 report, concluded the same. That EPA report found, for example, that Black people were 40% more likely to live in places with the highest projected increases in deaths because of extreme heat driven by climate change.

AP News
Visited Nswazi community & saw resilience amidst challenges. #Malnutrition & #poorHealth are real issues. Inspired to act! We're launching a project to empower them with #sustainable gardening & #farming skills to combat #hidden hunger. Support us? Let's empower Nswazi community together! 🌟🌱 #NswaziCommunity #Sustainability #CommunityEmpowerment"
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MSN

What’s behind the UK’s increase in autism diagnoses?

Experts are undecided about whether there is overdiagnosis or whether more children are autistic

The Guardian
Chronic pain associated with poor health—and COVID-19 infection—decades later

People who suffer from chronic pain at age 44 are more like to report pain, poor general health, poor mental health outcomes and joblessness in their 50s and 60s, according to a new study published this week in the open-access journal PLOS ONE by David Blanchflower of Dartmouth College, US, and Alex Bryson of University College London, UK.

Medical Xpress