Limited time75% off all plans
Get the app

Health Impacts of Climate Change

Health Impacts of Climate Change

Health Impacts of Climate Change

On this page

Pathways Overview - Climate's Health Web

  • Direct Impacts:
    • Extreme weather events (heatwaves, floods, cyclones): Cause immediate injuries, fatalities, displacement, and heat stress.
  • Indirect Impacts (Ecosystem-mediated):
    • Altered vector ecology: ↑ Vector-borne diseases (VBDs) like Malaria, Dengue.
    • Water & food systems: ↑ Water-borne (Cholera) & food-borne diseases; food insecurity, malnutrition from crop failures.
    • Air quality: Worsened by wildfires, dust; ↑ respiratory & cardiovascular diseases.
  • Indirect Impacts (Socio-economic & Demographic):
    • Mental health: Anxiety, depression, PTSD.
    • Population displacement, resource conflicts.
    • Overburdened health infrastructure. Climate Change Health Impact Pathways Diagram

⭐ Climate change is recognized by WHO as the single biggest health threat facing humanity.

Direct Health Effects - Weather's Wrath

  • Heatwaves: ↑ Morbidity/mortality.
    • Heat exhaustion, heat stroke (medical emergency).
    • Exacerbation: Cardiovascular, respiratory, renal diseases.
    • Dehydration, electrolyte imbalance.
  • Extreme Weather Events (Floods, Cyclones, Storms):
    • Injuries, trauma, drowning.
    • ↑ Water-borne diseases (cholera, typhoid, leptospirosis).
    • ↑ Vector-borne diseases (malaria, dengue due to stagnant water).
    • Displacement, mental health impacts.
  • Wildfires: Burns, severe respiratory distress (PM2.5 inhalation), eye irritation.
  • Droughts: Malnutrition, food insecurity, water scarcity.

⭐ Heat stroke is a life-threatening condition defined by core body temperature >40°C (104°F) with central nervous system dysfunction. Health Impacts of Extreme Heat

Infectious Disease Surge - Germs on Warm

  • ↑ Temp & altered rainfall → favorable conditions for pathogens/vectors.
  • Vector-Borne (VBDs):
    • Mosquitoes: Malaria (↑ spread), Dengue, Chikungunya, JE.
    • Ticks: KFD.
  • Water-Borne:
    • Floods/droughts → contamination.
    • Cholera, Typhoid, Hepatitis A/E, Lepto.
  • Food-Borne: ↑ Temp → ↑ bacterial growth (e.g., Salmonella).

Vector-borne disease transmission and thermal limits

⭐ Dengue vectors (Aedes) show ↑ breeding in urban heat islands & post-monsoon stagnation, expanding transmission.

Systemic Health Risks - NCDs & Nutrition

  • Air pollution (wildfires, ozone): ↑Cardiovascular (IHD, stroke) & Respiratory (Asthma, COPD) NCDs.
  • Extreme heat: ↑Cardiovascular strain, heatstroke, acute kidney injury; worsens chronic kidney disease.
  • Food Insecurity:
    • ↓Crop yields & nutritional quality (↓protein, zinc, iron) → Malnutrition (stunting, wasting), micronutrient deficiencies.
  • Water Insecurity: Affects hygiene, food safety; linked to kidney disease from dehydration/contaminants.
  • Mental health: Climate anxiety, PTSD → ↑NCD risk. Climate change health impacts pathway diagram

⭐ Climate change's agricultural impact may put 1-29 million more people at risk of hunger by 2050, severely affecting child nutrition.

India's Vulnerabilities - Unequal Burdens

  • Climate change disproportionately impacts vulnerable groups, widening health disparities.
  • Key Vulnerable Populations:
    • Low-income communities: ↓ adaptive capacity, ↑ exposure.
    • Coastal dwellers: Sea-level rise, ↑cyclones, saline intrusion.
    • Farmers & outdoor workers: Extreme heat, crop failures, ↓ livelihoods.
    • Elderly, children, pregnant women: Physiological susceptibility.
    • Tribal populations: Forest dependence, displacement, loss of traditional medicine.
    • Urban poor: Heat islands, overcrowding, poor sanitation.
  • Regional Hotspots & Risks:
    • Himalayas: Glacial melt (GLOFs), water insecurity.
    • Coasts: Cyclones, storm surges, ↑vector-borne diseases.
    • Indo-Gangetic plains: Floods, heatwaves, food insecurity.

    ⭐ Over 75% of Indian districts are vulnerable to extreme climate events. oka

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Increased vector-borne diseases (Malaria, Dengue) from altered vector ecology.
  • Rise in heat-related illnesses (heat stroke, exhaustion) in vulnerable populations.
  • Higher risk of water-borne diseases (Cholera, Typhoid) due to water contamination.
  • Exacerbation of respiratory illnesses (Asthma, COPD) from poor air quality.
  • Food insecurity and malnutrition due to crop failures and reduced agricultural output.
  • Mental health impacts like anxiety and PTSD from extreme weather events.
  • Worsening of NCDs, especially cardiovascular and respiratory diseases.

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