Hani Al -Nazer: Climate changes affect human skin and cause diseases

Hani Al -Nazer: Climate changes affect human skin and cause diseases

Dr. Hani Al-Nazer, a dermatology professor and former director of the National Research Center, reaffirmed that diseases are brought on by and significantly impacted by climate change.
Al -Nazer explained that with high temperatures from normal rates and increased moisture, the skin is exposed to groups of bacteria that cause the appearance of boils and sareeing, as well as types of fungi that cause what we call tinia and also suffers from painful Nile fever.
Dr.

Hani Al -Nazer emphasized that the various emissions of gases, fumes and exhausts that pollute air causes skin allergies such as eczema and acrecaria as well as they affect the freshness and vitality of the skin, which leads to the appearance of signs of premature aging.
He continued by stating that research conducted by scientists had shown that poetry is vulnerable to climatic changes such as fall, drought, and split ends, and that the nails also become less important and are more vulnerable to breaking and split ends.

According to the “Walkindermatology” website, the National Institutes of Health and the American Academy of Dermatology stated that climate change affects the distribution and severity of skin diseases, including skin infections, the most severe effects of sun exposure, environmental irritants, and the transmission of bacteria and viruses through water. Accordingly, people are at a higher risk of contracting skin conditions that only get worse as the temperature rises.

High temperatures encourage the growth of bacteria and the spread of viruses.
According to studies, the quantity and severity of cases of viral infections including hand, foot, and mouth have sharply increased due to the rise in global temperature.
Warmer temperatures and wind patterns, which transport germs to additional locations and to other equatorial axes of the globe, also contribute to the spread of fungus-related skin illnesses.

More ultraviolet photons from the sun enter our atmosphere when the ozone layer that shields the Earth from these rays thins.
Radiation exposure raises the risk of a number of conditions, including several that might hasten the ageing of the skin.
Climate change has been connected to numerous skin conditions. One of the common cases is eczema, which causes annoying and itchy rash.

Air pollutants are one of the many factors that can cause eczema to flare up, and air pollution has also been related to higher rates of lupus and psoriasis.

Hani Al-Nazer: Diseases are brought on by climate change and harm human skin.

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