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Climate change is impacting babies’ birth weight

According to a new study, exposure to cold or heat stress, particularly in the latter stages of pregnancy, leads to children being too large or too small for their gestational age.

Thred Media
3 min readJan 17, 2024

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Last year was the hottest on record by an enormous margin, with the Earth 1.48°C warmer than pre-industrial levels and dangerously close to the 1.5°C limit set during the 2015 Paris Agreement.

In 2023, the average global temperature was 0.17°C higher than in 2016, the previous hottest year on record.

Though nowhere near as catastrophic as they’re set to be if we cross the threshold — think, an uptick in insect-borne diseases, stresses on food production, and the eradication of entire ecosystems — the repercussions of this are already palpable, with recent months a flurry of extreme weather, natural disasters, biodiversity loss, droughts, and wildfires.

Aside from the deeply concerning environmental impacts of global warming, rising temperatures are also drastically affecting human health.

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Thred Media
Thred Media

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