8 Ways Climate Change Affects Health — and How to Protect Yourself

President Donald J. Trump has called climate change a hoax and taken steps to roll back federal regulations on greenhouse gas emissions. The overwhelming scientific consensus, however, is that climate change is real and a serious threat to public health.
If you’re concerned about the health risks of climate change, it helps to stay aware and informed. Here are eight of the biggest health issues, with advice on what you can do to protect yourself and your family.
1. Extreme Heat Is Becoming Deadlier
Extreme heat is one of the clearest and most immediate health risks of climate change.
In recent decades, heat waves have already become hotter, occured more often, and lasted longer. As global temperatures rise due to climate change, the United States is expected to continue to warm faster than other parts of the world.
Extreme heat also strains the cardiovascular system. “Heat and pollution events are linked to higher rates of heart attack, stroke, and heart failure exacerbations,” says Lisa Patel, MD, executive director of the Medical Society Consortium on Climate and Health and associate professor of pediatrics at Stanford Medicine in California. Heat can also interfere with blood pressure and psychiatric medications, Dr. Patel adds.
How to Cope
2. Climbing Temperatures May Hamper Good Sleep
Sleep is when the body cools itself and repairs tissues. When nights stay hot, that cooling process is disrupted, particularly in densely built cities where pavement and buildings trap heat after sunset.
How to Cope
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3. Wildfire Smoke Aggravates Respiratory Disease
Hotter temperatures and prolonged drought are fueling larger and more intense wildfires, which means increased wildfire smoke, says Alexander Rabin, MD, pulmonologist and clinical associate professor of pulmonary and critical care medicine at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor.
How to Cope
4. Air Pollution Raises Risks for Asthma, COPD, and Heart Disease
“When we talk about greenhouse gas policy, we’re also talking about air quality,” says Dr. Rabin. “And air quality has immediate consequences for people’s lungs and hearts.”
Extreme heat can also increase ozone formation, compounding respiratory risks.
Carbon dioxide itself isn’t directly harmful at the levels we breathe; the issue is how quickly and in what quantities we’re adding it to the atmosphere, says Patel. “That destabilizes our climate and increases exposure to heat, smog, and wildfire smoke — and those are what harm people.”
How to Cope
5. Floods and Storms Bring Injury and Mental Health Strain
Global warming increases the severity and frequencies of storms and floods, which cause thousands of deaths and economic losses, says William Rom, MD, MPH, global distinguished professor of environmental health at NYU School of Global Public Health in New York City.
Climate models show that heavy rainfall events are increasing, raising flood risk in many regions.
How to Cope
6. Warmer Weather Is Expanding Infectious Disease
“Warmer temperatures can also affect how quickly some pathogens grow and replicate — like, for example, some of the bacteria that cause food poisoning,” says Dr. Rudolph.
Rudolph also points out that climate change can cause both animals and humans to migrate, putting people into contact with germs they may not have encountered before.
“As the planet gets hotter, some animals are moving toward the poles, coming into contact for the first time with different animals, and in some cases with people,” she says. That has been the case, for instance, with the lone star tick, which is responsible for spreading a condition known as alpha gal syndrome.
“We also know that deforestation — which is also a significant cause of climate change — is causing a loss of natural habitats and making animals move to new areas, where they might share germs with people or other animals,” she says.
How to Cope
7. More Pollen May Worsen Allergies and Skin Diseases
“Warmer temperatures also mean that plants produce more pollen, and many people who suffer from allergies are finding that their allergies are worse and the allergy season is longer,” Rudolph says.
How to Cope
8. Air Pollution May Increase the Risk of Alzheimer’s Disease
Fine particulate matter — the microscopic pollution released when fossil fuels are burned — may raise the risk of Alzheimer’s disease, says Patel.
In a large national study of older Americans, higher long-term exposure to particulate matter was linked with an increased likelihood of developing this neurodegenerative illness.
Researchers concluded that improving air quality could be an important tool to prevent dementia.
How to Cope
More Tips for Protecting Yourself
In addition to voting for political candidates who are committed to reducing the risks posed by climate change, you can protect your physical and mental health and minimize the health hazards you and your community face in the following ways:
Improve the Air Inside Your Home
Rethink Transportation When You Can
Reduce Waste and Shift Food Choices
Take Care of Your Mental Health
The Takeaway
- Climate change is already affecting health, contributing to more heat-related deaths, wildfire smoke exposure, and air pollution–related illness, and experts expect weakening pollution protections will increase those risks.
- Extreme heat and poor air quality can worsen heart and lung disease and disrupt sleep, and may raise the risk of dementia.
- Older adults, children, pregnant people, and those with chronic conditions are especially vulnerable. Having a heat and air-quality plan can lower personal risk.
- Steps like improving indoor air, preparing for extreme weather, and reducing everyday pollution exposure can protect both your health and your community.
Resources We Trust
- Cleveland Clinic: Climate Change and Your Health
- Mayo Clinic: Effects of Hot Weather, Humidity on Blood Pressure, Heart
- Johns Hopkins Medicine: Are You Prepared for a Disaster?
- United States Environmental Protection Agency: What You Can Do About Climate Change
- Sustainable Princeton: Prepare for the Health-Related Impacts of Climate Change
Additional reporting by Lindsey Wahowiak.
- Howard JT et al. Trends of Heat-Related Deaths in the US, 1999-2023. JAMA. August 26, 2024.
- Maslin M et al. Understanding the Health Impacts of the Climate Crisis. Future Healthcare Journal. March 2025.
- Prepare for the Health-Related Impacts of Climate Change. Sustainable Princeton.
- Are You Prepared for a Disaster? Johns Hopkins Medicine.
- Liao J et al. Impact of Health Exposure on Health and Its Population Vulnerability in the United States. Environment International. December 2025.
- Minor K et al. Rising Temperatures Erode Human Sleep Globally. One Earth. May 20, 2022.
- Keep Your Cool — and Stay Healthy — With These Hot-Weather Sleep Tips. American Heart Association. August 19, 2025.
- Health Effects Attributed to Wildfire Smoke. United States Environmental Protection Agency. October 14, 2025.
- Grant E et al. Long-Term Health Effects of Wildfire Exposure: A Scoping Review. The Journal of Climate Change and Health. May 2022.
- Heins-Nesvold J. Let the Air In. American Lung Association. August 21, 2023.
- Soeroso NN et al. Four-type of Masks and its Effectiveness Based on Reduced Level of Expiratory Carbon-monoxide. Medical Archives: Journal of the Academy of Medical Sciences of Bosnia and Herzegovina. October 2020.
- Stimpson JP et al. Health Equity in the Wake of Disasters and Extreme Weather: Evidence from an Umbrella Review. Health Affairs Scholar. November 11, 2025.
- Thomson MC et al. Climate Change and Vectorborne Diseases. New England Journal of Medicine. November 23, 2022.
- Climate Change. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. September 5, 2024.
- Allergies. Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health.
- Russo F et al. Atopic Dermatitis and Climate: Environmental Stressors and Care Strategies. Dermatology and Therapy. October 7, 2025.
- Deng Y et al. The Role of Comorbidities in the Associations Between Air Pollution and Alzheimer’s Disease: A National Cohort Study in the American Medicare Population. PLOS Medicine. February 17, 2026.
- What You Can Do About Climate Change. United States Environmental Protection Agency. January 13, 2026.
- Lettuce Not Waste: New EPA Research Highlights Food Waste Contributions to Climate Change. United States Environmental Protection Agency. December 19, 2023.
- Climate Action Must Include Mental Health. World Health Organization. June 3, 2022.
- What Is Eco-Anxiety and Grief? Center for Nature Informed Therapy.

Sanjai Sinha, MD
Medical Reviewer
Dr. Sinha did his undergraduate training at the University of California in Berkeley, where he graduated magna cum laude. He earned his medical degree at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York City in 1998 and completed his internship and residency training at the New York University School of Medicine in 2001. Subsequently, he worked with the Department of Veterans Affairs from 2001 to 2012 and held faculty appointments at both the Mount Sinai School of Medicine and Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons.
In 2006, he won the VISN3 Network Director Award for Public Service and a commendation from the secretary of Veterans Affairs for his relief work after Hurricane Katrina. He joined Weill Cornell Medical College in 2012, where he is an assistant professor of clinical medicine and the director of the care management program, as well as a practicing physician.
In addition to his work for Everyday Health, Sinha has written for various publications, including Sharecare and Drugs.com; published numerous papers in peer-reviewed medical journals, such as the Journal of General Internal Medicine; and presented at national conferences on many healthcare delivery topics. He is a fellow of the American College of Physicians.

Becky Upham
Author
Becky Upham has worked throughout the health and wellness world for over 25 years. She's been a race director, a team recruiter for the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society, a salesperson for a major pharmaceutical company, a blogger for Moogfest, a communications manager for Mission Health, a fitness instructor, and a health coach.
Upham majored in English at the University of North Carolina and has a master's in English writing from Hollins University.
Upham enjoys teaching cycling classes, running, reading fiction, and making playlists.