Scholar

Kai Chen

H-index: 23
Environmental science 49%
Geography 12%
colincarlson.bsky.social
🚨 NEW: Climate change is already causing 30,000 deaths per year - a global annual economic loss of $100-350B USD - but the true damage is probably 10x higher. Out TODAY in Nature Climate Change: the first systematic look at the science of "health impact attribution" 🔓 www.nature.com/articles/s41...
"Health losses attributed to anthropogenic climate change," a brief communication in the journal Nature Climate Change. There's a map showing regions of the world, and pie charts of relevant studies as they apply to different health impacts like "heat-related deaths" and "maternal and child health"
gregggonsalves.bsky.social
#NIH is hanging by a thread. The #CDC has been decimated. #RFK Jr. and Russell #Vought are psychopaths--I don't say this frivolously--they are cold, calculating, inflicting violence on millions through public policy. It is where we are right now. These men are not normal. 1/
colincarlson.bsky.social
Something I wish more people understood: part of the point of shock-and-awe grant terminations at NIH and NSF has been to make scientists and university administrators afraid to speak out against the administration. And it's working. But, some of us were never going to get a grant from them anyway.

Reposted by: Kai Chen

climatecentral.org
🔴 #THISISCLIMATECHANGE

🔥 Wildfires in Canada—sending smoke into the Northeast U.S.—were fueled by extreme heat, 20°F+ above average for early August.

🌡️ Meanwhile, 53M people in the U.S. Southwest & Mexico are facing extreme heat that’s nearly impossible without climate change.
🧵/6
Two side-by-side maps of Canada highlighting the influence of climate change on early August 2025 heat. The left map shows temperature departures from normal, with widespread areas in central and eastern Canada 12–14°C above average (shaded in dark red). The right map shows Climate Shift Index (CSI) values, indicating that the extreme heat in these regions is strongly linked to climate change (CSI values of 3 to 5 shown in red). Data from ECMWF ERA5 and NOAA GFS.

Map highlighting the Southwestern U.S. and northern Mexico with Climate Shift Index (CSI) values for August 4–8, 2025. Deep red areas over Arizona, New Mexico, Texas, and northern Mexico indicate CSI values of 5—the highest level—showing extreme heat that is almost entirely attributable to climate change. Lighter shades extend across surrounding regions. Source: Climate Central; analysis based on ECMWF ERA5 and NOAA GFS data.
kaichenyale.bsky.social
Wildfire smoke in New England, please stay safe!

Reposted by: Kai Chen

dangaristo.bsky.social
The Trump administration is launching a new wave of attacks on universities, and UCLA is the latest target.

My reporting on how the university has been hit and how some of its scientists are responding:
www.science.org/content/arti...
NSF and NIH suspend grants to UCLA
Move follows Trump administration finding that school didn’t effectively combat antisemitism
www.science.org

Reposted by: Kai Chen

colincarlson.bsky.social
One thing very few people know, even in the climate-health research space, is that - in addition to NIH / NSF / NASA / EPA blocking any new research on climate change and health - all the philanthropies have decided to take NGO-shaped roles rather than fund research, and so they aren't stepping in.

Reposted by: Kai Chen

lingzhichu.bsky.social
🎆NEW RESEARCH OUT
In our new study published in One Earth, we uncovered hard truths about NO2-related health disparities in the U.S. Racial-ethnic minorities were generally more exposed and susceptible. The most affected race-ethnicity group was location-specific.
Disparities in NO2-related health burden prevalent across race-ethnicity and income groups in the United States
Increasing evidence has linked long-term NO2 exposures to adverse health, while current research on the NO2-related health burden rarely assesses exposure and susceptibility disparities jointly. In th...
www.cell.com
kaichenyale.bsky.social
🔬 Using new deep learning + chem transport models, we reconstructed daily 1km NO₂ levels for 42 years.
📉 All groups saw declines, but widening relative gaps among racial groups persisted.
💡 Why care? Short-term NO₂ spikes = asthma/heart risks.
⚠️ Progress isn’t equal. Targeted interventions needed!
kaichenyale.bsky.social
🚨 NEW STUDY: Despite falling CA air pollution 1980-2022, relative racial disparities in short-term NO₂ exposure worsened.
➡️ Hispanic/Latino communities faced 3X MORE high-pollution days (>50µg/m³) than White residents in 2020.
Paper: doi.org/10.1016/j.jhazmat.2024.134211

Reposted by: Kai Chen

pammcelwee.bsky.social
Well tonight’s Friday government news dump is horribly depressing- EPA to eliminate their entire research branch (ORD). I’ve been on ORD’s science advisory board the last few years and they do amazing work across climate, air, water and other issue. This sucks www.nytimes.com/2025/07/18/c...
E.P.A. Says It Will Eliminate Its Scientific Research Arm
www.nytimes.com

Reposted by: Kai Chen

yalesph.bsky.social
Beyond just physical damage and lives lost, floodwaters can cause increased health risks including:
➡️ Diarrhea
➡️ Mold
➡️ Chronic conditions
➡️ Stress and mental health disorders
➡️ Disruption to health care services

Read more ⬇️
abcnews.go.com/Health/texas...
Texas floodwaters can increase health risks that could last for months: Experts
Floodwaters be contaminated with debris as well as high levels of bacteria, chemicals, waste and other pollutants, which can cause prolonged health risks, experts say.
abcnews.go.com
kaichenyale.bsky.social
Not in this study, but working on it! Would love to chat if you are interested in potentially collaboration!
kaichenyale.bsky.social
Devastating to see over 50 lives lost in Texas floods💔This tragedy reflects a broader pattern our Nature Communications study uncovered:~100 Texans died yearly from flooding—not just from drowning, but injuries, heart, and lung diseases.
@lingzhichu.bsky.social
📊 www.nature.com/articles/s41...
meganranney.bsky.social
As US population level health data becomes ever-more unreliable … we are proud to unveil a new resource for families, policy makers, and healthcare providers @yalesph.bsky.social
yalesph.bsky.social
America's health data system is fragmented, outdated, and hard to access. This slows the response to emerging health threats. PopHIVE unites diverse partners and data in one location, creating a solution for improved public health data for action.

4/5 @meganranney.bsky.social
“National health data has been too fragmented and too slow for too long. PopHIVE changes that.” - Dean Megan L. Ranney
PopHIVE unites diverse partners and data in one location, creating a solution for improved public health data for action.
yalesph.bsky.social
America's health data system is fragmented, outdated, and hard to access. This slows the response to emerging health threats. PopHIVE unites diverse partners and data in one location, creating a solution for improved public health data for action.

4/5 @meganranney.bsky.social
“National health data has been too fragmented and too slow for too long. PopHIVE changes that.” - Dean Megan L. Ranney
PopHIVE unites diverse partners and data in one location, creating a solution for improved public health data for action.
maxkozlov.bsky.social
🚨 BREAKING: Nearly 4 months the NIH cut its first grants, a judge has ruled that the directives and process that led to cuts are arbitrary and capricious.

"The explanations are bereft of reasoning — virtually in their entirety... unsupported by [facts]."

Each of them are VOID and ILLEGAL, he says.
kaichenyale.bsky.social
The National Weather Service issued air quality alerts for New York City for Wednesday and many of the surrounding suburbs, including those in New Jersey and most of southern Connecticut.

www.nytimes.com/2025/06/03/w...
Smoke From Canadian Wildfires Approaches the Northeast
www.nytimes.com

References

Fields & subjects

Updated 1m