This post is by Sheryl Canter, an online writer and editorial manager at Environmental Defense Fund.
At a congressional hearing on Wednesday, Howard Frumkin, a senior official at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), said there was strong scientific evidence of major health problems due to climate change in the next few decades, including:
- Heat waves that put children and the elderly at risk
- Danger of droughts and floods from extreme weather
- Increased food-borne and water-borne infectious diseases
- Worsened air pollution due to higher temperatures
- Migration into new areas of vector-borne diseases like malaria
At least he got to say it. Last October, CDC testimony on the health risks from global warming was censored by the White House.
Rep. Hilda Solis (D-Calif), who chaired the hearing, said she suspected that "a layer of screening" continues to limit what CDC officials are allowed to say.