The authors underscore the urgent need to address the interconnected threats of climate change, conflict, and health. They highlight how these threats not only cause direct harm, such as heat-related deaths and conflict-driven mortality, but also compound vulnerabilities by damaging health systems, disrupting essential services, and fueling cycles of instability. Fragile and conflict-affected states are particularly at risk, facing higher adaptation costs and limited capacity. The authors call for integrated approaches that combine climate action, conflict prevention, and health system strengthening, emphasizing the importance of conflict-sensitive interventions and transparent reporting of military emissions to support global resilience and peacebuilding.
Tackling the Complex Links Between Climate Change, Conflict, and Health
Author(s)
Barbora Šedová and Andrew Haines
Publication Date
5 November 2025
Publisher
BMJ
DOI / URL
Resource Type
Op-Ed Commentary
Systems Addressed
Climate • Geopolitics and International Security • Health
Resource Theme
Learning resource
