* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Climate Change and Infectious diseases
Survey
Document related concepts
Transcript
Climate Change and Infectious diseases Dr. Andrew K. Githeko PhD Kenya Medical Research Institute Climate and Human Health Research Unit Conference communications Introduction The transmission of many human infectious diseases such as malaria, cholera, dengue fever, meningitis, and Lyme disease is a function of interaction with the environment which results in varying rates of transmission. Climate, which is a major component of the environment, has a direct impact on the population sizes of the disease vectors and the development rate of the infectious agents in the vectors and in the environment. Climate is one of the key determinants of diseases distribution in time and space. The interactions of the atmosphere, oceans, terrestrial and marine biospheres, the cryo-sphere and land surface determine the Earth’s surface climate. Human activities such as use of fossil fuels, land use change and agriculture has increased the concentration of greenhouse gases namely carbon dioxide (CO2 ), methane (CH4 ) and nitrous oxide (N 2O). These gases trap heat in the atmosphere thus increasing the earth’s surface temperatures and the precipitation regimes. Its is estimated that by the end of this century the mean earth’s temperature will increases by 1.4 to 5.6 oC and accompanied by a more frequent and intense extreme events associated with outbreaks of infectious diseases. Climate change involves a change in the mean state and in the departure from the mean. While the change in the mean state is a slow process, climate variability is increasing at a higher rate resulting in frequent diseases outbreaks. A reversal of climate change may take several decades even after reducing the greenhouse gases and therefore human beings must adapt to the health consequences of climate change to reduce its potential negative effects. Adaptation requires skills, considerable level of economic development, and political will, factors that are not found in sufficient quantities in developing countries. Thus developing countries, many of them located in endemic areas, are likely to be most adversely affected by climate change. Infectious disease Vector-borne diseases Recent studies of disease variations associated with inter-annual climate variability (such as those related to the El Niño cycle) have provided much useful evidence of the sensitivity to climate of many disease processes. This is particularly so for mosquitoborne diseases. The combination of knowledge from such empirical research; the resultant theoretical understanding of biological and ecological processes; and the output of scenario-based modelling; leads to several conclusions about the future effects of climate change on human populations. Higher temperatures, changes in precipitation and climate variability would alter the geographic range and seasonality of transmission of many vector-borne diseases. Mostly, range and seasonality would be extended; in some cases reduced. Currently 40% of the world population lives in areas in which endemic malaria occurs. In areas with limited or deteriorating public health infrastructure, increased temperatures will tend to expand the geographic range of malaria transmission to higher altitudes and latitudes. Higher temperatures in combination with conducive patterns of rainfall and surface water will extend the transmission season in some locations. Changes in climate mean conditions and variability would affect many other vector-borne infections (such as dengue, leishmaniasis, Lyme disease, and tick-borne encephalitis) at the margins of their current distributions. For some vector-borne diseases in some locations, climate change will decrease the likelihood of transmission via a reduction in rainfall, or temperatures that are too high for transmission. A range of mathematical models, based on observed climatic effects on the population biology of pathogens and vectors, indicate that climate change scenarios over the coming century would cause a small net increase in the proportion of the world population living in regions of potential transmission of malaria and dengue. An alternative modelling approach, based on a direct correlation of the observed distribution of disease distribution against a range of climate variables, suggests that there will be little change in malaria distributions, as areas that become permissible for transmission are balanced by others that become unsuitable for at least one climatic factor. Neither approach attempts to incorporate the effects of socioeconomic factors or control programmes on the distribution of current or future disease. Table 1 Main vector-borne diseases: populations at risk and burden of diseases Disease Vector Population Number Disability Present at risk currently adjusted distribution infected or life years new cases lost a per year Malaria Mosquito 2 400 272 925 000 39 300 000 Tropics/ million subtropics (40% world population) Schistosomiasis Water snail 500-600 120 million 1 700 000 Tropics/ million subtropics Lymphatic Mosquito 1 000 120 million 4 700 000 Tropics/ filariasis million subtropics African Tsetse fly 55 million 300 00 – 1 200 000 Tropical trypanosomiasis 500 ,000 Africa (Sleeping sickness) Leishmaniasis Sand Fly 350 million 1.5 2 1 700 000 Asia, million Onchocerciasis River blindness Black fly American Triatomine trypanosomiasis bug (Chagas’ disease) Dengue Mosquito Yellow fever Mosquito Japanese encephalitis Mosquito 120 million 18 million 100 million 16-18 million 3 000 million 468 million in Africa 300 million Tens millions 200,000 50,000 1 100 000 600 000 of 1 800 000b Not available 500 000 Africa, Southern Europe, Americas Africa, Latin America, Yemen Central and South America All tropical countries Asia a The Disability –Adjusted Life Year (DALY) is a measure of population health deficit that combines chronic illness or disability and premature death. Numbers are rounded up to nearest 100 000. b Data from Gubler and Metzer. Water-borne infectious diseases There are complex relationships between human health and water quality, water quantity, sanitation and hygiene. Increases in water stress are projected under climate change but it is difficult to translate these changes into risk of water-related diseases. Heavy rainfall events can transport terrestrial microbiological agents into drinking-water sources resulting in outbreaks of crytosporidiosis, giardiasis, amoebiasis, typhoid and other infections. Recent evidence indicates that copepod zooplankton provide a marine reservoir for the cholera pathogen and thereby facilitate its long-term persistence and disseminated spread to human consumers via the marine food-web. Epidemiological evidence has pointed to a widespread environmental cause for recent outbreaks of cholera, rather than a point source contamination as seen in Peru in 1991 and East Africa in 1997/98. Strong links are found between cholera infections, bathing and drinking water from east African lakes. Cholera epidemics also are associated with positive surface temperature anomalies in coastal and inland lake waters. Global warming is expected to lead to changes in the marine environment that alter risks of bio-toxin poisoning from human consumption of fish and shellfish. For example, biotoxins associated with warm waters, such as ciguatera in tropical waters, could extend their range to higher latitudes. Higher sea surface temperatures would also increase the occurrence of algal blooms that may affect human health directly, and which are also ecologically and economically damaging. Changes in surface water quality and quantity are likely to affect the incidence of diarrhoeal diseases. This group of diseases includes conditions caused by bacteria such as cholera and typhoid as well as parasitic diseases such as amebiasis, giardiasis and cryptosporidium. Infections with cholera and typhoid bacteria are dependent on the concentration of the pathogens in water or food. Currently the World Health Organization (WHO) estimates more than 1 billion people worldwide to be without access to safe drinking water, and that every year approximately 4 million die prematurely because they do not have access to safe drinking water and sanitation. Climate can increase directly the amount of pathogen in the water through increasing the biotic reservoir of the infectious agent (cholera) or by decreasing the amount of water in a river or a pond and thus raising concentration of the bacteria (typhoid). Floods can cause contamination of public water supplies with both bacteria and parasites as surface discharge flows into rivers and reservoirs, while drought can increase the concentration of pathogens in the limited water supplies. A reduction in the availability of clean water increases the risk of drinking contaminated supplies and also reduces the amount of water available for personal hygiene thus leading to skin infections. Africa It is estimated that by 2050 the Sahara and the semi-arid parts of southern Africa may warm by 1.6OC, while equatorial countries such as Cameroon, Uganda and Kenya could experience warmer temperatures of 1.4 OC . Recent analysis of global mean surface precipitation from 1901-1995 indicates that some regions in Africa have an increasing, while others have a decreasing trend. While East Africa has had an increasing trend of wetness, West and North Africa, are likely to have a decreasing trend . These are broad overviews and may have low certainty when the regions are downscaled. Climate change will have short and long-term impacts on disease transmission. For example, a short-term increase in temperature and rainfall as was seen in the 1997/98 El Niño caused Plasmodium falciparum malaria epidemics and Rift Valley fever in Kenya. This may have been due to accelerated parasite development and an explosion of vector populations. This phenomenon can be attributed to inter-annual climate variability. However, these changes can also reduce malaria transmission as was observed in Tanzania. There is emerging evidence that besides the seasonal extreme climatic events, there is a general elevation of mean temperatures and in some cases, precipitation. For example, the mean rate of temperature change in Africa from 1901-1995 has been 0.39 o C/century. While there has been a reduction in precipitation in many part of the continent there has been a mean increase of 300 mm/century in the East African region. Such changes are likely to support rapid development of malaria vectors and parasites in regions where there has been low-temperature transmission restriction. On the other hand, increased warming will have a negative effect at the extreme high-temperature range of malaria vectors. In Senegal Anopheles funestus has virtually disappeared and malaria prevalence dropped by more than 60% over the last 30 years due to reduced precipitation and drought. Currently the seventh cholera pandemic is active across Asia, Africa and South America. During the 1997/98 El Niño, the rise in sea-surface temperature and excessive flooding provided two conducive factors for cholera epidemics which were observed in Djibouti, Somalia, Kenya, Mozambique and the United Republic of Tanzania, all of which border the Indian Ocean. Cholera epidemics have also been observed in areas surrounding the Great Lakes in the Great Rift Valley region. A significant association between bathing, drinking water from Lake Tanganyika and the risk of infection with cholera has been found. It is likely that warming in these African lakes may cause conditions that increase the risk of cholera transmission. Major epidemics of bacterial meningococcal infection usually occur every 5-10 years within the African meningitis belt, and typically start in the middle of the dry season and end a few months later with the onset of the rains. Between February and April 1996, the disease affected thousands of people in parts of northern Nigeria, many of whom died31 . This epidemic spread from the traditional meningitis belt to Kenya, Uganda, Rwanda, Zambia and the United Republic of Tanzania. One of the environmental factors that predispose to infection and epidemics is low humidity. To date this disease has been limited to the semi-arid areas of Africa, suggesting that future distribution could expand due to increased warming and reduced precipitation. Plague is a flea-borne disease and the major reservoirs of infection are rodents such as the common rat. Rodent populations fluctuate widely with the availability of food, which in turn depends on rainfall. Exceptionally heavy rainfall can increase food abundance; as a consequence the population of rodents and fleas may multiply rapidly. During severe droughts, rodents may leave their wild habitats in search of food in human houses and this can also increase the risk of plague transmission. Plague outbreaks in Africa have in the last few years been reported in Mozambique, Namibia, Malawi, Zambia and Uganda Europe The most important vector-borne diseases in Europe and some of the former Soviet Union Republics are malaria, which is transmitted by mosquitoes and Lyme disease by ticks. The evidence that climate change has increased the risk of these diseases is weak, because of the relatively subtle changes in climate to date and the over-riding impact of major environmental changes created by expanding populations, alterations in agricultural practice and changing socio-economic conditions. However, there should be no room for complacency, as the capacity exists for an increase and expansion of many vector-borne diseases in many parts of the continent. Some countries in Eastern Europe with restricted access to water at home could be affected by any climate-related decrease in supplies. For instance, an increase in the frequency and intensity of extreme precipitation could increase the risk of transmission of cryptosporidiosis. The distribution of carriers of food-borne diseases such as flies, cockroaches and rodents could change due to climate change. In the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, a study of food-borne illness found a strong relationship between incidence and temperature in the month preceding the illness. Leptospirosis, a disease associated with flooding, is a major concern in some parts of Europe. Outbreaks of the disease have been reported following floods in Ukraine and the Czech Republic in 1997 and Portugal in 1967. As well as the direct injuries and infections resulting from flooding, psychological distress including cases of suicide has been associated with the event. South America The most important climate-sensitive vector borne-diseases in South America, as far as the numbers of people affected are concerned, are malaria, leishmaniasis, dengue fever, Chagas disease and schistosomiasis. Numbers of cases of these diseases reported to the Pan American Health Organization in 1996 are shown below: Table: Vector– borne diseases in South America, 1996 – Source: PAHO, 1998 Disease Malaria Dengue *Chagas disease Schistosomiasis Number of cases 877,851 276,758 5,235,000 181,650 *Cases of Chagas disease have been estimated from the number of people exposed New cases of cutaneous leishmaniasis varied from 250 per year in Bolivia (1975-1991) to 24,600 in Brazil (1992) and those of onchocerciasis were around 9,200 in 1992 . Other vector borne diseases which have a relatively low number of cases occurring each year, and which may be sensitive to climate shifts are yellow fever (522 cases in 1995), plague (55 cases in 1996), Venezuelan equine encephalitis (25,546 cases in 1995), and other arbovirus infections. Up to 1991, in the Brazilian Amazonia alone, 183 different types of arbovirus were isolated and among these 34 are known to cause human disease, sometimes in explosive epidemics. One of these, the Oropouche Fever Virus, is known to occur in cycles associated with the beginning of the rainy season. Recent estimates based on the Hadley Centre's coupled atmosphere-ocean general circulation model, HadCM3, projected that additional people at risk of infection due to year round transmission of malaria in South America will range from 25 million by year 2020 to 50 million by 2080 In semi-arid zones in Mexico, rainfall has been observed to cause outbreaks of bubonic plague probably as a result of an increase in the rodent reservoirs. Rodents escaping floods in Colombia are suspected to have been the primary cause of leptospirosis outbreaks. The effects of water-borne diseases are well documented in this region. Between 1991 and 1996 cholera affected 21 counties in Peru resulting in almost 200 000 cases and 11 700 deaths. Climate variability was linked to later outbreaks in Peru and Ecuador during the 1997/98 El Niño event. Besides cholera in Peru, other diarrhoeal diseases such as Salmonella typhi have been linked to environmental change, climate and sanitary conditions. North America The recent importation of West Nile viral encephalitis into the New York area in 1999 marked the first time this virus had been found in North America. Whether or not the extreme record-breaking summer drought along the East Coast affected Culex mosquito populations that can carry West Nile virus currently remains unanalyzed. Birds are the natural hosts for the West Nile virus, a zoonotic disease. Such zoonotic diseases, including tick-borne diseases, some mosquito-borne encephalitides, and rodentand flea-borne diseases are more difficult to predict and control since these involve intermediate reservoir hosts in the environment. Also, to the extent that climate change may have indirect impacts on vegetation and ecosystems that can affect determinants of these diseases, projected changes are not straightforward. The hard tick, Ixodes scapularis, transmits Borrelia burgdorferis, a spirochete, and the causative agent for Lyme disease, the most common vector-borne disease in the U.S., with 15,934 cases in 1998. Other tick-borne diseases are the Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever (RMSF), and Ehrlichiosis, the later having first being recognized in the mid-1980s. Tick and host mammal populations involved are influenced by land use/land cover, soil type, elevation, and the timing, duration, and rate of change of temperature and moisture regimes. The relationships between vector life stage parameters and climatic conditions have been verified experimentally in both field and laboratory studies. Climate change, therefore, could be expected to alter the distribution of these diseases. According to one modelling study, in the southern U.S., RMSF may decline due to ticks' intolerance of high temperatures and diminished humidity . Of the water-borne diseases, giardia cysts are fairly common in treated water in Canada (18.2%) and very frequent in raw sewage samples (73%). The pathogen cryptosporidium is also widely distributed and capable of causing large-scale outbreaks. For example, in 1993, more that 400 thousand cases (including 54 deaths) from a cryptosporidium outbreak were reported in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. A positive correlation between rainfall, concentration in river water and human diseases has been noted for both cryptosporidiosis and giardiasis. Asia, Australia and the West Pacific Islands The Asian continent spans through the tropical to the temperate region. Plasmodium falciparum and P. vivax malaria, dengue and dengue hemorrhagic fever and schistosomiasis are endemic in parts of tropical Asia. In the past 100 years mean surface temperatures have increased by 0.3-0.8 OC across the region and is projected to rise by 0.4- 4.5 OC by the year 2070. An increase in temperature, rainfall and humidity in some months in the Northwest Frontier Province Pakistan has been associated with an increase in the incidence P. falciparum malaria while in the North east region of the Punjab, malaria epidemics increased five- fold in the year following the El Niño and in Sri Lanka the risk of malaria epidemic increases four- fold during an El Niño year. In the Punjab, epidemic are associated with above normal precipitation while in Sri Lanka, below normal precipitation. According to WHO, many countries in Asia experienced unusually high levels of dengue/dengue hemorrhagic fever in 1998 the activity being higher that in any other year. It has been suggested that a major contributing factor to this activity may be changes in . the weather patterns, such as the El Niño Laboratory experiments have demonstrated that the incubation period of dengue (DEN-2) could be reduced from 12 days at 30OC to 7 days at temperatures equal to or greater that 5 32 OC (32-35 OC) in Ae. egypti thus climate change can have an effect on the transmission of the virus. Dengue has been reported in several Small Island States in the Pacific region. It has been shown in some of these islands that rainfall and local temperatures correlate with the southern oscillation index (SOI) a component of ENSO (El Niño Southern Oscillation). Furthermore a positive correlation was found between SOI and dengue in 10 out of 14 of the island states. Water-borne diseases such as cholera, and various diarrhoeal diseases such as giardiasis, salmonellosis and cryptosporidiosis, occur commonly with contamination of drinking water in many south Asian countries. These diseases could become more frequent in many parts of South Asia in a warmer climate. Conclusions Besides the existing divers of infectious diseases such as seasonal weather variation, social-economic status, vector control programmes, environmental changes and drug resistance, climate change and variability are highly likely to impact upon the current disease epidemiology. The effects are likely to be expressed in short-term epidemics to long-term gradual changes in disease epidemiology. Recent results in Kenya suggest that climate accounts for up to 50% of the anomalies in hospital based highland malaria cases. Adaptation to climate change will depend to a certain extent of the level of health infrastructure in the affected regions. Some regions such as Africa and South America have a great diversity of disease vectors that are sensitive to climate change and more efforts will be required to contain the expected disease epidemiology. Furthermore climate variability, unlike any other epidemiological factor, has the potential to precipitate simultaneous and multiple diseases epidemics. Climate change has far reaching consequences beyond health and touches on all life support systems. It is therefore a factor that should be rated high among those that affect human health and survival References 1 Githeko A. K. Lindsay S. W. Confalonieri U, and Partz J. (2000) Climate changes and Vector borne diseases: A regional analysis Bulletin of the World Health Organization 78 :1136-1147 2 Climate Change and Human Health 2 nd Edition. Risks and Responses World Health Organization: 2004