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Climate Change and Infectious Diseases

Climate Change and Infectious Diseases

Climate Change and Infectious Diseases

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Climate Change and Infectious Diseases - Warming Up Trouble

  • Climate change (CC) → altered temperature, precipitation, humidity.
  • Impacts:
    • Vector ecology (e.g., mosquitoes, ticks): ↑ breeding, survival, biting rates.
    • ↑ Pathogen development in vectors.
    • Altered water quality & availability.
  • Consequences:
    • ↑ Range & seasonality of Vector-Borne Diseases (VBDs) (Dengue, Malaria, Chikungunya, Zika, Lyme disease).
    • ↑ Water-borne diseases (Cholera, Typhoid) via floods, contamination.
    • Altered zoonoses patterns (e.g., Hantavirus).
    • Food insecurity → malnutrition → ↑ disease susceptibility. Climate Change and Zoonotic Disease Transmission

⭐ The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) reports highlight the significant impact of climate change on human health, including the spread of infectious diseases.

Climate Change and Infectious Diseases - Shifting Battlegrounds

  • Key drivers: ↑ Temperatures, altered rainfall, extreme weather events.
  • Mechanisms of Impact:
    • Vectors (mosquitoes, ticks): Expanded range, prolonged seasons, ↑ biting rates, faster pathogen development (shorter extrinsic incubation).
    • Pathogens: Enhanced replication, ↑ environmental survival.
    • Hosts (human/animal): Migration, altered immunity, ↑ exposure.
  • Consequences - Shifting Battlegrounds:
    • Geographic expansion: Dengue, Zika, Lyme, West Nile Virus into new areas.
    • ↑ Incidence: Vector-borne, water-borne (Cholera, Leptospirosis post-floods), food-borne diseases.
    • Altered seasonality & intensity of epidemics.

⭐ Increased temperatures can accelerate pathogen development rates within vectors (e.g., Plasmodium in mosquitoes) and shorten incubation periods.

Drought and water scarcity

Climate Change and Infectious Diseases - India's Climate Casualties

Climate change alters vector ecology, pathogen virulence, and human susceptibility, increasing India's infectious disease burden.

  • Impacts:
    • Vector-Borne: ↑ Temp & altered rainfall → expanded mosquito/tick habitats (e.g., malaria in Himalayas).
    • Water-Borne: Floods/droughts → water contamination (cholera, typhoid). ↑ Sea temp → Vibrio growth.
    • Zoonotic: Habitat loss → ↑ human-animal interface.

⭐ India is highly vulnerable to climate-sensitive diseases like dengue and malaria, with changing rainfall patterns and temperatures expanding vector habitats to new regions.

Vector-borne disease transmission and thermal limits

India's Climate Casualties:

DiseaseVector/ModeClimate Influence
MalariaAnopheles↑ Temp, rainfall → expanded range (Himalayas), prolonged transmission
Dengue/ChikungunyaAedes↑ Temp, humidity → ↑ breeding, shorter EIP
Japanese EncephalitisCulex (pigs/birds)↑ Temp, rainfall, rice cultivation → ↑ vector density
Cholera/TyphoidContaminated water/foodFloods, ↑ water temp → contamination, ↑ pathogen survival
LeptospirosisContaminated water/soilFloods, heavy rainfall → ↑ exposure
Kala-azarSandflies↑ Temp, humidity → expanded habitat (North India)

Climate Change and Infectious Diseases - Health Resilience Rx

⭐ The 'One Health' approach, integrating human, animal, and environmental health, is crucial for addressing climate change impacts on infectious diseases.

  • Enhanced Surveillance & Early Warning Systems (EWS):
    • Integrate climate data for predictive modeling.
    • Strengthen laboratory diagnostic capacity and reporting.
  • Key Adaptation Strategies:
    • Intensified vector control (e.g., IRS, LLINs, biological methods).
    • Improved Water, Sanitation, and Hygiene (WASH) access.
    • Climate-proofing health infrastructure; ensuring service continuity.
    • Strategic vaccination programs and chemoprophylaxis.
  • Policy, Mitigation & Intersectoral Collaboration:
    • Implement 'Health in All Policies' (HiAP).
    • Promote mitigation actions with health co-benefits (e.g., clean energy).
    • Boost community resilience, awareness, and participation.
  • Research, Funding & Capacity Building:
    • Invest in research on climate-disease links and effective interventions.
    • Strengthen healthcare workforce capabilities for climate-related risks.

Climate Change and Infectious Disease Strategies

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Climate change significantly impacts vector-borne diseases (malaria, dengue) by altering vector ecology.
  • Warmer temperatures expand geographic range of vectors like mosquitoes and ticks.
  • Extreme weather events (floods, droughts) ↑ risk of water-borne diseases (cholera, leptospirosis).
  • Altered rainfall patterns affect mosquito breeding sites, influencing disease transmission dynamics.
  • Increased risk of zoonotic spillovers due to habitat changes and wildlife migration.
  • Heat stress and air pollution can worsen respiratory conditions, indirectly affecting infection susceptibility_._

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