Limited time75% off all plans
Get the app

Vector-Borne Disease Shifts

On this page

VBD Shifts - Climate's Buggy Business

  • Climate change (↑Temp, erratic rainfall, ↑humidity) alters vector ecology.
  • Mechanisms:
    • ↑ Vector (mosquito, tick) breeding, survival, biting rates.
    • Faster pathogen replication (e.g., dengue virus in Aedes).
    • Geographic range expansion (new areas, higher altitudes).
    • Prolonged transmission seasons.
  • Result: ↑ incidence/spread of Dengue, Malaria, Chikungunya, JE, KFD. Vector-borne disease transmission cycles and thermal limits

⭐ Climate change facilitates the altitudinal and latitudinal expansion of vectors like Aedes mosquitoes, increasing dengue risk in previously non-endemic areas.

VBD Shifts - India's Shifting Swarms

  • Climate change (↑Temp, altered rainfall, extreme weather) → shifts vector (mosquito, sandfly) distribution & disease patterns.
  • Malaria (Anopheles):
    • ↑Temp → faster larval development, ↑biting, shorter Extrinsic Incubation Period (EIP).
    • Geographic expansion: higher altitudes (Himalayas), new regions.
    • Rainfall variability impacts breeding sites.
  • Dengue & Chikungunya (Aedes):
    • ↑Temp → faster viral replication, longer transmission seasons.
    • Aedes aegypti/albopictus highly adaptive.
  • Japanese Encephalitis (Culex):
    • Breeding (rice paddies) linked to rainfall; ↑Temp aids vector survival.
  • Kala-azar (Phlebotomus argentipes):
    • Sandfly sensitive to temp/humidity; warming may expand range.
  • Lymphatic Filariasis (Various mosquitoes):
    • Breeding influenced by rainfall & temperature.

⭐ Climate change facilitates the expansion of Aedes mosquitoes, vectors for Dengue and Chikungunya, into new geographical areas, including temperate regions.

VBD Shifts - Hot Zones, New Norms

  • Climate drivers: Temp ↑, altered rainfall, extreme weather impact vector biology (e.g., Aedes, Anopheles) & pathogen replication.
  • Vector shifts:
    • Geographic range expansion: To higher altitudes (malaria in Himalayas) & latitudes.
    • Prolonged transmission seasons: Earlier onset, later end.
    • Accelerated development: Faster vector lifecycles.
  • Disease impact (India):
    • Dengue/Chikungunya: ↑ urban/peri-urban incidence, wider spread.
    • Malaria: Highland expansion; P. falciparum changes.
    • JE: Vector density changes (rice cultivation, water logging).
    • KFD: Tick activity/host distribution shifts.
  • Hot Zones: Emergence in previously low-risk/non-receptive areas.
  • New Norms: ↑ frequency, intensity, geographic extent of VBD outbreaks.

Climate Change and Vector-Borne Disease Transmission

Aedes mosquitoes (dengue vectors) thrive in warmer, wetter conditions, expanding urban "hot zones".

VBD Shifts - Fighting Future Fevers

Climate change alters vector ecology, expanding VBD ranges and intensity. Key Indian VBDs: Malaria, Dengue, Chikungunya, JE, Filariasis, Kala-azar.

  • Drivers of Shift:
    • ↑ Temp: Faster vector/pathogen development (shorter EIP).
    • Altered Rainfall: Impacts vector breeding sites.
    • ↑ Humidity: Affects vector survival, activity.
    • Extreme Events: Floods, droughts displace populations, alter exposure.
  • Strategies:
    • Surveillance: Strengthen IDSP, climate-based EWS.
    • Vector Control: IVM, novel tools (Wolbachia).
    • Health Systems: Fortify diagnostics, treatment, rapid response.
    • Intersectoral Action: Health, meteorology, agriculture, urban planning synergy.
    • Research: Climate-health vulnerability, adaptation strategies.
    • Community Engagement: Awareness, adaptive behaviors.

⭐ National Vector Borne Disease Control Program (NVBDCP) is the umbrella program for prevention and control of six VBDs in India.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Climate change drives ↑ vector-borne diseases (VBDs) like malaria, dengue, JE.
  • Warmer temperatures boost vector breeding, pathogen replication, and biting rates.
  • Altered rainfall & humidity expand vector habitats and transmission seasons.
  • Geographic spread of VBDs to new regions and higher altitudes is a key threat.
  • Extreme weather events (floods, cyclones) often trigger VBD outbreaks.
  • Diseases like Kala-azar (sandflies) & KFD (ticks) show distribution shifts related to climate factors.

Continue reading on Oncourse

Sign up for free to access the full lesson, plus unlimited questions, flashcards, AI-powered notes, and more.

CONTINUE READING — FREE

or get the app

Rezzy — Oncourse's AI Study Mate

Have doubts about this lesson?

Ask Rezzy, your AI Study Mate, to explain anything you didn't understand

Enjoying this lesson?

Get full access to all lessons, practice questions, and more.

START FOR FREE