Abstract
Persons with communication disabilities including persons with post-stroke aphasia
(PWAs) possess a vulnerability to climate change as a result of their communication
impairments. The disproportionate effects of climate change are likely to exacerbate
preexisting inequities in social determinants of health. Communication disability
intersecting with other characteristics subject to discrimination (e.g., race, age,
sex, income) may lead to inequities in climate-related adaptive capacity. This article
echoes earlier concerns related to climate change and further educates healthcare
professionals about the impact of climate change on the global human population, with
particular consideration of PWAs. The aims of this article are the following: (1)
to broaden the understanding of aphasiologists and clinicians caring for PWAs about
climate change and the contributions of human activity (anthropogenic) to this crisis;
(2) to describe climate change and its impact on health; (3) to detail the intersectionality
of climate and health; (4) to explore climate change and its potential effects on
PWAs; and (5) to offer hope through emissions reduction, adaptation, resilience, and
immediate change.
Keywords
aphasia - climate change - disability - climate justice