
This representational image shows a person experiencing allergy symptoms. — Pixabay
#Climate #change #triggering #explosion #allergies #experts
A warm climate causes an “explosion” of allergies such as grass fever, experts have cautioned that long and more severe jirgas are causing increasing symptoms from flowing nose and itching eyes to asthma.
The United Nations World Meteorological Organization (WMO) has already linked the changing climate to the production and distribution of jargons and ovaries.
Studies show that melting of cold and hot spring season in the winter causes plants and trees to swell quickly, thus expanding the jirga season.
Completing this problem, it is believed that air pollution increases the sensitivity of individuals for allergens. In addition, the species of invasive plants are spreading to new territories, which are introducing allergic novels.
In recent decades, allergy symptoms have increased significantly in industrial countries, especially in industrial countries. Currently, about a quarter of European adults suffer from air -generated allergies, including severe asthma, these figures have increased from 30 % to 40 % in children.
The World Health Organization (WHO) projects that can be affected by 2050, half of all Europeans.
“We are in a crisis because allergies are bursting,” said Severen Fernandez, president of the French Allergist Union.
Fernandez said that an allergic person will only tolerate what is commonly known as hay fever, although for years, “now that person can now become asthma after one or two years.”
The growing output of the jarg
According to the WMO’s 2023 report, climate change affects allergic patients in many ways.
The increasing level of carbon dioxide, which is one of the main heat -trapped gases, which promotes foam fuel, promotes plant growth, and in turn increases the production of jarg.
Air pollution not only disturbs the air path of the exposed, but it also causes stress to the plants, after which it produces more “allergic and disturbing jirgas”.
Each species of the plants responded to different factors such as water availability, temperature and CO2 concentration, said Nicholas Wesz at Lily University.
For example, the birch trees will die as the summer becomes warm and dry, while the heat causes the spread of ragueide, which is a very allergic invasive plant.
“There is no doubt that climate change is affecting,” said Wesz.
In a study published in 2017, researchers predicted that the climate change would double the rigging allergy in Europe by 2041-2060, which has increased the number of affected people from 33 million to 77 million.
The authors suggested that the number of more jirgas as well as long jirgas can also tighten the symptoms.
Protection
Under the development, the “Auto Pollen” program across Europe aims to provide real -time data about the distribution of jirgas and fungal egeons.
In Switzerland, contracting with Metososis allows patients and doctors to meet personal allergic profiles with specific allergies across the country.
In some parts of France, authorities have installed “polynriums”, gardens filled with local allergies.
They provide information about the first jirgas issued in the air so that people can start taking timely antihistamines and other security measures.
“In mid -December, the hazlents have begun to open, which was not before,” said Salom Pastecat, an association’s plant expert behind the Jirg Garden.
“Really because we have a very light cold, so the flower has already come,” he said.
Some countries are taking an interventionist approach, which eliminates the jirg on the source.
In Japan, the government in 2023 announced a plan to tackle allergies caused by many island cedar trees in the island, which includes a cedar falling cedar to replace them with the species, which produces low jirgas.
European countries are also more mindful of species in the environment, both locals who have been planted and newcomers like Rageway.
Preference species are given low allergic ability, such as maple or fruit trees.
“It is not the idea to stop planting allergic species,” said the passcate, “but refrain from creating diversity and” avoiding places where there are rows of birch trees, as it was a few years ago.
It was a Birch tree in a client’s garden, which, in fact, closed the symptoms for a architect, Simon Bartemey, a architect of Paris.
“I had a major eye allergy, and since then it has been a repeated problem every year,” he said.
“I’m on antihistamines, but if I don’t take them, I get itching, I am very tired, I have a cough … I can’t sleep at night.”