cover image: An Unsustainable Life : The Impact of Heat on Health and the Economy of Bangladesh (English)

An Unsustainable Life : The Impact of Heat on Health and the Economy of Bangladesh (English)

10 Nov 2024

Bangladesh is warming at an alarming rate, the maximum temperature increased by 1.1°C between 1980 and 2023. At the same time, the heat index, or feels like temperature (which combines humidity and temperature to assess impacts on human health brought on by heat), rose by 4.5°C. Heat waves from global warming have already caused more deaths than all other forms of natural disasters combined in many countries (Jay et al. 2021). Developing countries are particularly susceptible to heat-related adverse impacts because adaptation to climate change is expensive and a large proportion of the workforce is engaged in outdoor occupations (Lancet 2018). Countries in South and Southeast Asia, particularly Bangladesh, are vulnerable to a high burden of heat-related diseases (Burkart et al. 2021). Bangladesh ranks second globally in exposure to elevated temperatures, with its capital, Dhaka, identified as a global hotspot for urban heat (Zachariah et al. 2023). Despite the region's high vulnerability, research on the human health impacts of heat waves is limited. To better understand the links between heat and health, this report responds to the following question: How does increasing exposure to excess heat affect the physical and mental health outcomes of individuals and their productivity in the short term? In doing so, the report sets the context with a historical analysis of temperature changes in Bangladesh between 1976 and 2023. Next, it uses nationally and sub nationally representative two-round panel data comprising more than 16,000 individuals in Bangladesh from 2024 to quantify the impact of exposure to heat on physical and mental health conditions and productivity losses. The report thus serves three specific objectives: (1) grounded in localized evidence that links the effect of heat on health, recommend effective adaptation measures to reduce the vulnerabilities of the Bangladeshi population to heat; (2) quantify economic losses borne by the country due to global warming to assist Bangladesh policy makers in leveraging international support and financing to mitigate the impacts; and (3) add evidence to the global discourse on heat and human health, especially mental health conditions and loss of productivity. This report is first of its kind in Bangladesh, collecting data on specific physical and mental health conditions to establish the link between heat and health. The evidence-based policy recommendations derived from this study are applicable to other countries as well.
health bangladesh climate change gender urban development climate change adaptation disease control climate change mitigation nutrition drones population south asia transport economics transport policy urban transport adolescent health health system strengthening transport governance nutrition and population health-hg human development and gender nutrition and food security urban transport policy and planning health systems and policies transport and sustainable development transport impact on the environment transport and climate change low-emissions transport environment and natural resource management emerging transport technologies

Authors

Mahmud,Iffat, Raza,Wameq Azfar, Wahid,Syed Shabab

DOI
https://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-1-4648-2172-1
Disclosure Date
2024/11/11
Disclosure Status
Disclosed
Doc Name
An Unsustainable Life : The Impact of Heat on Health and the Economy of Bangladesh
ISBN
978-1-4648-2172-1
Pages
110
Product Line
Advisory Services & Analytics
Published in
United States of America
Rel Proj ID
BD-Cross-Sectoral Action For Health, Nutrition And Population (Hnp -- P168901
Series Name
International Development In Focus;
TF No/Name
TF0A9941-Climate change and health,TF0B2252-Technical work on road safety,TF0B5942-Mapping climate-sensitive health risks to inform national One Health st,TF0B8759-Mapping Climate Sensitive Zoonotic Diseases in Bangladesh (HSSP-MDTF po
Unit Owning
Health Nutri & Population SAR 2 (HSAHP)
Version Type
Final
Volume No
1

Table of Contents

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