What Others Are Saying
It's time to put human welfare at the center of our climate strategies, which includes reducing the Green Premium to zero and improving agriculture and health in poor countries.
Bill Gates
Co-chair, Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
Although chronic diseases are primarily environmental (i.e., not genetic) in origin, the particular environmental causes of these diseases are poorly understood.
Dr. Stephen Rappaport
Professor of Environmental Health Sciences, UC Berkeley
If we know what people are exposed to, then we can prevent the exposures... Let's identify the major sources of exposure, and work to control those.
Dr. Linda Birnbaum
Former Director, National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences
Chronic illnesses like heart disease, cancer, and neurodegeneration take 20 years or longer to incubate in our body. So we have a long runway to work with... We've never been able to prevent them because we didn't have the tools... But that's completely changed now.
Dr. Eric Topol
Founder and Director, Scripps Research Translational Institute
Medicine's biggest transformations will come from addressing the contexts and causes of disease, not just the disease itself.
Dr. Sandro Galea
Dean, Boston University School of Public Health
Societies focus health spending disproportionately on curative care rather than preventive care, neglecting to address chronic and systemic conditions that cause persistent suffering... This preference for health care ultimately harms community health by treating and returning individuals to the environments in which they first fell sick.
Rockefeller Foundation
Precision Public Health Initiative
Emerging challenges like climate change, pollution, and urbanization are driving surges in chronic diseases (obesity, cancers, cardiovascular illness) which demand completely different economic models and political mindsets.
Dr. Jeremy Farrar
Chief Scientist, World Health Organization
Without decisive action on these risk factors, health goals will be unattainable. Action on environmental determinants should be integrated as a priority for health systems strengthening and resilience.
Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus
Director-General, World Health Organization
If there is any chance that the fertility declines that we found are as real and as fast as they appear to be, we should be much more careful about the chemicals we allow human exposure to.
Deep Science Ventures
Science-driven Venture Creation