New global study links climate change to a surge in dangerously hot days for pregnant women, with developing nations facing the greatest risks.
Climate change is pushing more pregnancies into high-risk territory, especially in places already struggling with limited healthcare access.
In a sobering
reminder of how global warming is reshaping human health, a new study has found
that climate change has doubled the number of dangerously hot days for pregnant
people in nearly 90 per cent of countries and territories around the world.
The analysis, conducted by Climate
Central, directly quantifies how rising temperatures — largely driven by the
burning of fossil fuels — are increasing the risk of heat exposure during
pregnancy. Using temperature data from 2020 to 2024 across 247 countries and
940 cities, researchers calculated the rise in what they term pregnancy
heat-risk days — days when maximum temperatures exceed 95 per cent of
historical local records. These days are linked to increased rates of preterm
birth, hypertension, gestational diabetes, and other complications.
“Extreme
heat is now one of the most pressing threats to pregnant people worldwide,”
said Dr Bruce Bekkar, a women’s health physician and an expert on
climate-related health risks. “It’s pushing more pregnancies into high-risk
territory, especially in places already struggling with limited healthcare
access.”
According to the
report, climate change added at least 30 additional heat-risk days each year in
nearly one-third of countries. In some of the most severely affected areas —
including parts of the Caribbean, Central and South America, Southeast Asia,
the Pacific Islands, and sub-Saharan Africa — all of the extreme heat days
experienced over the past five years were attributed to human-caused climate
change.
The
consequences are particularly dire in regions with fragile healthcare systems.
“Climate change is increasing extreme heat
and stacking the odds against healthy pregnancies worldwide,” said Dr Kristina
Dahl, vice president for science at Climate Central. “Even a single day of
extreme heat can raise the risk of serious pregnancy complications.”
The study
used two core methods to assess the risk. First, it counted days where
temperatures exceeded the 95th percentile of historic local ranges — a
threshold known to elevate the risk of preterm birth. Second, it employed
Climate Central’s Climate Shift Index, which compares real-world temperatures
to a model of a planet unaffected by human-driven warming. This allowed
researchers to estimate how many heat-risk days were directly caused by climate
change.
Every country studied saw an increase in such days. In 222 out of 247 countries
and territories, climate change had at least doubled the annual number of
pregnancy heat-risk days. The scale of the increase highlights the inequitable
burden of climate impacts: developing nations, which have contributed the least
to global greenhouse gas emissions, are often the hardest hit.
Medical experts warn that these findings
signal a growing public health emergency.
“Cutting
fossil fuel emissions isn’t just good for the planet,” Bekkar emphasised. “It’s
a crucial step toward protecting pregnant people and newborns around the
world.”
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