Posted by Francesco Fiondella | Aug 21, 2009 |
The IRI has just published a short bulletin to provide an update on this year’s El Niño and what it could mean for the health in different regions of the world. The document gives decision makers key recommendations on how to monitor communities at risk and take steps to reduce their vulnerability. Visit this [...]
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Posted by Francesco Fiondella | Aug 7, 2009 |

Forecasts by the International Research Institute for Climate and Society and other institutions show that a weak El Niño has developed in the equatorial Pacific, and is likely to continue evolving with warmer-than-normal conditions persisting there until early 2010. What exactly is this important climate phenomenon and why should society care about it? Who will [...]
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Posted by Mary-Elena Carr | Aug 6, 2009 |
Early last month, I attended a meeting on Abrupt Climate Change in a Warming World. Climate Matters @ Columbia has discussed abrupt climate change before, referring to the hydrologic cycle, and with regards to melting sea ice or permafrost.
Shifts in the earth climate are a known fact: crocodile-like reptiles lived in Greenland 55 million years [...]
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Posted by Adrian Soghoian | Jul 8, 2009 |

Waste not, Want not?
The source of this proverb is unknown, but I’m going to hazard a guess and say it wasn’t your average (modern) American. I say this because your average American runs through 56 tons of trash a year - including 500 plastic cups and 650 pounds of paper. If we [...]
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Posted by Kalpana V. | Jun 18, 2009 |
The Summer Institute, mentioned here, drew to a close last week and while attending a session on final presentations by the participants, I was struck by how participants, depending on their backgrounds, benefited differently from the course and took away unique learnings.
For instance, one participant, Daddi Jima Wayessa, Head of Malaria and other Vector-borne Diseases [...]
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Posted by Cathy Vaughan | Jun 9, 2009 |

We hear a lot about the impact of AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria in Africa. But if you’re keeping track, you may as well add bacterial meningitis to the list of nasty diseases that plague the continent.
Bacterial meningitis is an infection of the thin lining that surrounds the brain and the spinal cord, known as the [...]
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Posted by Francesco Fiondella | Jun 3, 2009 |

Since Monday, 12 public-health professionals and climate scientists from ten countries have been at Columbia University’s Lamont campus to learn how to use climate information to make better decisions in health-care planning and disease prevention. They’re taking part in the second Summer Institute on Climate Information for Public Health, organized by the International Research Institute [...]
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Posted by Betsy Ness-Edelstein | May 18, 2009 |
Since the first cases of swine flu, or H1N1, were reported in April, public health organizations, governments, media and the general public have spent much time and energy trying to understand and contain the virus. Responses have ranged from the serious (like the WHO’s declaration of a phase 5 pandemic alert) to the ridiculous (like [...]
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Posted by Katherine Regan | Mar 26, 2009 |
The Fifth World Water Forum in Istanbul, Turkey, ended this past Sunday, March 22. Held every three years, the Forum is organized by the World Water Council, an international multi-stakeholder platform designed to facilitate international cooperation on the management and use of water in an environmentally sustainable way. The Forum ended with the Istanbul Ministerial [...]
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Posted by Gilma Mantilla | Feb 16, 2009 |
Health professionals, epidemiologists, health management workers and health policymakers are increasingly concerned about the potential impact that climate variability and climate change could have on public health. However, many public health professionals are not yet aware of the ways in which climate information can help them manage the impacts of climate on their work. At [...]
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