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SCOTUS skeptical that state abortion bans conflict with federal health care law; Iowa advocates for immigrants push back on Texas-style deportation bill; new hearings, same arguments on both sides for ND pipeline project; clean-air activists to hold "die-in" Friday at LA City Hall.

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"Squad" member Summer Lee wins her primary with a pro-peace platform, Biden signs huge foreign aid bills including support for Ukraine and Israel, and the Arizona House repeals an abortion ban as California moves to welcome Arizona doctors.

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The urban-rural death divide is widening for working-age Americans, many home internet connections established for rural students during COVID have been broken, and a new federal rule aims to put the "public" back in public lands.

Nurses Cite Diseases Connected to Calif.'s Warming

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Thursday, January 19, 2017   

LOS ANGELES - You might not think of nurses as being concerned with the effects of climate change. But it turns out they see its impact every day, as a result of illnesses connected to our changing environment.

Katie Huffling, director of the Alliance of Nurses for Healthy Environments, co-authored a report out this month that looked at climate change and its effects on nurses and patients. She said global warming is evident every day in increased cases of childhood asthma, Lyme disease and even unhealthy pregnancies. What’s more, California's food supply and agricultural communities are impacted by it.

"In drought-conditions or during heat waves, the plants aren't able to pull up as much nutrients as during a normal crop season,” Huffling said. “And so one of the concerns that we have is, over time, especially with grains, that they may not have the nutritional value that they do now."

Advocates worry the new administration will be less open to seeing connections between climate change and human activity. NASA and NOAA data shows that 2016 was once again the hottest year on record.

Huffling said she’s also worried about how Native American communities in the Southwest may be impacted by a warming climate.

"In the Southwest, tribal communities are one of the communities that will be most significantly impacted,” she said; "and so as nurses we want to be able to support those communities so that they're not feeling such significant impacts."

The report came out of a summit hosted late last year by the Obama administration called the "2016 White House Summit on Climate Change, Health and Nursing."



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