Rising CO2 in Human Blood Signals Toxic Atmosphere Within 50 Years
CO2 overload, detected in human blood, suggests toxic atmosphere within 50 years

I analyzed U.S. National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey data from 1999 to 2020, revealing that rising atmospheric carbon dioxide is directly altering human blood chemistry. Bicarbonate levels are climbing while calcium and phosphorus drop, mirroring global CO2 trends. If unchecked, these shifts could push blood values to unhealthy limits within half a century, signaling a toxic atmosphere that demands immediate emission reductions.
"If these trends continue, blood bicarbonate values could be at the limit of the accepted healthy range in half a century, and Ca and P will be at the limit of their healthy ranges by the end of this century."