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An Introduction to the Geography of Health Chapter 2: Environmental Change and Human Health Photo by Helen Hazen Clear-cutting, South Australia Ecology of Human Health An ecological approach to human health considers humans as part of a broader cycle of disease that requires an understanding of how environments influence human health. 2 Anthamatten and Hazen An Introduction to the Geography of Health Chapter 2 The natural environment refers to components of the environment such as soil, air, vegetation, and water. Photo by Peter Anthamatten 3 Anthamatten and Hazen An Introduction to the Geography of Health Chapter 2 The built environment refers to human-constructed parts of the landscape such as buildings, dams, and roads. Photo by Peter Anthamatten 4 Anthamatten and Hazen An Introduction to the Geography of Health Chapter 2 The social environment refers to aspects of human behavior and organization that comprise the social structures within which we live. Photo by Peter Anthamatten 5 Anthamatten and Hazen An Introduction to the Geography of Health Chapter 2 Can you think of one way in which each aspect of the human environment (natural, built, and social) could influence human health? 6 Anthamatten and Hazen An Introduction to the Geography of Health Chapter 2 Agents of Disease People are continually exposed to organisms and substances that can cause disease. 7 Pathogens Geogens Physical hazards Bacteria Coal dust Trauma Rickettsiae Asbestos Extreme heat/cold Fungi Lead Radiation Anthamatten and Hazen An Introduction to the Geography of Health Chapter 2 Transmissibility Can you think of other examples of communicable and non-communicable diseases? 8 Anthamatten and Hazen What is the difference between an infectious and a contagious disease? An Introduction to the Geography of Health Chapter 2 Transmission Routes Human or animal source of a pathogen Direct transmission occurs via bodily contact or airborne droplets. Human or animal recipient of the pathogen Indirect transmission occurs via vectors, food, water, soil, or fomites. 9 Anthamatten and Hazen An Introduction to the Geography of Health Chapter 2 Adaptation The concept of adaptation can also help explain spatial patterns of disease in the context of human ecology. Adaptation can be a genetic, physiological, or behavioral process. Can you think of an example of each type of adaptation? 10 Anthamatten and Hazen An Introduction to the Geography of Health Chapter 2 Physiological adaptation can help us to understand the passage of an epidemic through a population. An S-shaped curve is often used to represent changes in the number of people infected during the passage of an epidemic. 11 Anthamatten and Hazen An Introduction to the Geography of Health Chapter 2 In the early part of an epidemic few people are infected and can act as a source of the pathogen so the disease spreads slowly. 12 Anthamatten and Hazen An Introduction to the Geography of Health Chapter 2 In the mid-part of an epidemic, the rate of new infections increases as more and more people become infectious. The majority of the population is susceptible because most people have yet to come into contact with the pathogen. 13 Anthamatten and Hazen An Introduction to the Geography of Health Chapter 2 Over time, the rate at which new infections occurs slows as much of the population has either died or developed immunity (physiologically adapted) to the pathogen. 14 Anthamatten and Hazen An Introduction to the Geography of Health Chapter 2 Can you think of any historical examples of infectious diseases that have followed this pattern? 15 Anthamatten and Hazen An Introduction to the Geography of Health Chapter 2 Cultural Ecology of Disease The cultural ecology of disease is the study of how cultural practices influence the likelihood of a disease circulating in a particular population. This image shows men and boys bathing in a communal bathing tank in the Patuakhali District, Bangladesh. Photo by Centers for Disease Control / Michael Schwarz, 1975 16 Anthamatten and Hazen An Introduction to the Geography of Health Chapter 2 Understanding the cultural ecology of disease can shed light on key behaviors and practices that might slow or prevent the spread of disease. For instance, the Hungarian doctor, Ignaz Semmelweis, recognized the importance of hand washing to health in the nineteenth century. Source: Doby (1860) 17 Anthamatten and Hazen An Introduction to the Geography of Health Chapter 2 For example, Chagas disease was not a problem in the Amazon until recently, perhaps due to changing cultural practices. 18 Anthamatten and Hazen An Introduction to the Geography of Health Chapter 2 Disease Cycles An important aspect of human ecology is the way in which humans interact with other species. Many species act as vectors or reservoirs of diseases that infect humans. 19 Anthamatten and Hazen Source: US Department of Agriculture (2001) An Introduction to the Geography of Health Chapter 2 A disease cycle diagram offers a way to visualize and analyze disease cycles. Boxes represent organisms or environments in which the pathogen must reside to complete its lifecycle. Arrows indicate how the pathogen moves between boxes. 20 Anthamatten and Hazen An Introduction to the Geography of Health Chapter 2 This generalized disease cycle represents a hypothetical disease. Pathogens such as bacteria are living agents of disease. Hosts such as humans are the organisms they infect. Vectors such as flies transmit the pathogen between hosts. Reservoirs act as sources of infection and may be animate (e.g., a monkey) or inanimate (e.g., a water body). 21 Anthamatten and Hazen An Introduction to the Geography of Health Chapter 2 The disease cycle of dengue shows that the dengue virus (the pathogen) is transmitted from human host to human host by a mosquito vector. 22 Anthamatten and Hazen An Introduction to the Geography of Health Chapter 2 Disease cycle diagrams can indicate where interventions could be made to break the disease cycle. 23 Anthamatten and Hazen An Introduction to the Geography of Health Chapter 2 Landscape Epidemiology Russian geographer E. N. Pavlovsky (1966) coined the term “landscape epidemiology” to refer to the ways in which regions impart patterns to disease distributions via factors such as vegetation, geology, and climate. Photo by Helen Hazen 24 Anthamatten and Hazen Mineral Springs, Yellowstone An Introduction to the Geography of Health Chapter 2 Elevation Rainfall Temperature Landscape epidemiology suggests that factors such as elevation and precipitation might play a key role in the distribution of a vector-borne disease such as malaria. Data Sources: Guerra et al. (2008), Legates and Willmott (1990) 25 Anthamatten and Hazen An Introduction to the Geography of Health Chapter 2 The distribution of dengue fever is also related to climate, providing another example of landscape epidemiology. The mosquito vector, Aedes aegypti, is only able to survive where year-round temperatures remain above 10oC. Data Source: WHO (2008) 26 Anthamatten and Hazen An Introduction to the Geography of Health Chapter 2 Of course, the natural environment cannot fully explain the range of a disease. Schistosomiasis provides a good example of how landscape and human behavior interact in ways that affect disease patterns. Schistosomiasis affects about 200 million people worldwide and more than 650 million people live in endemic areas (WHO 2008b). This map shows the distribution of schistosomiasis in Egypt. Image Source: Courtesy of the WHO (1987) 27 Anthamatten and Hazen An Introduction to the Geography of Health Chapter 2 The schistosomiasis pathogen completes its lifecycle in water, snails and vertebrate hosts such as people or water buffalo. 28 Anthamatten and Hazen An Introduction to the Geography of Health Chapter 2 Hosts are infected when they come in contact with free-swimming larvae. 29 Anthamatten and Hazen An Introduction to the Geography of Health Chapter 2 How could the schistosomiasis disease cycle be broken? 30 Anthamatten and Hazen An Introduction to the Geography of Health Chapter 2 31 Anthamatten and Hazen An Introduction to the Geography of Health Chapter 2 The Urban Environment Region Overcrowding and overextended infrastructure have become significant problems in places that have experienced rapid urbanization. Proportion of urban population living in slums (%) Developing World Sub-Saharan Africa Asia (excluding ) Middle East and South America Cen. America / Caribbean Total 72.5 39.7 35.8 35.5 23.7 43.4 Developed World Europe North America Oceania Total 6.2 5.8 3.5 7.5 Data Source: WRI (2007) 32 Anthamatten and Hazen An Introduction to the Geography of Health Chapter 2 Diarrheal diseases such as cholera and typhoid are significant problems in urban contexts, particularly in slums where fresh water is lacking. Outskirts of Lima, Peru Photo by Heike Alberts Outskirts of Esparza, Costa Rica 33 Anthamatten and Hazen An Introduction to the Geography of Health Photo by Peter Anthamatten Chapter 2 Urban environments have also proved to be ideal for some disease-spreading pests such as rats. The mosquitoes that carry dengue fever thrive in urban contexts where trash and small containers provide an abundance of small pools of water for breeding. 34 Anthamatten and Hazen An Introduction to the Geography of Health Chapter 2 Environmental Change Changes in vegetation and the array of species living in an area can also alter disease distributions. For example, malaria is spreading in parts of the Amazon Basin where forest has been converted to cattle pasture, improving breeding conditions for the mosquito vector. 35 Anthamatten and Hazen For example, Lyme disease may be spreading in the northeast US as landscape change alters the species balance of the region and more settlements are built in periurban settings where the tick vector is common. An Introduction to the Geography of Health Chapter 2 Climate change may have a variety of impacts on human health associated with changes in temperature, precipitation, vegetation, and atmospheric patterns. How, more specifically, might climate change influence human health? Photo by Helen Hazen 36 Anthamatten and Hazen An Introduction to the Geography of Health Chapter 2 Impacts of climate change on human health may include: Warmer temperatures may increase the altitudinal and latitudinal range of certain vectors. More extreme weather events may have direct impacts on health such as through trauma, as well as lead to ecological disruption with associated health impacts. 37 Anthamatten and Hazen Changing rainfall patterns and related vegetation distributions may alter the range of vectors. Changes in the composition of the atmosphere may increase respiratory pollutants like ozone. More frequent heat waves may increase heat-related deaths. An Introduction to the Geography of Health Chapter 2 Discussion Questions 1. 2. 3. 38 How is cultural ecology important in the transmission of dengue fever? Using specific examples, consider whether the built environment or the natural environment influences human health more profoundly. Considering recent events, can you identify any evidence that suggests a link between climate change and health? Anthamatten and Hazen An Introduction to the Geography of Health Chapter 2 References Centers for Disease Control and Schwarz, M. (1975) “Image ID# 12356” Public Health Image Library [Online]. Available: <http://phil.cdc.gov/phil/download.asp> (Accessed 10 Jan 2011). Doby, J. Ignaz Phillip Semmelweis. Copper engraving. Guerra, C. A., Gikandi, P. W., Tatem, A. J., Noor, A. M., Smith, D. L., Hay, S. I. and Snow, R. W. (2008) "The limits and intensity of Plasmodium falciparum transmission: Implications for malaria control and elimination worldwide", Plos Medicine, 5: 300–11. Legates, D. R. and Willmott, C. J. (1990) "Mean seasonal and spatial variability in gauge-corrected, global precipitation", International Journal of Climatology, 10: 111–27. United States Department of Agriculture. (2001). “Aedes aegypti (Linnaeus) yellow fever mosquito” Agricultural Research Service Image Gallery. [Online]. Available: <http://www.sel.barc.usda.gov/selhome/gbu/aedes.html> (Accessed 12 December 2010). [WHO] World Health Organization. (1987) Atlas of the Global Distribution of Schistosomiasis. [Online]. Available: <http://www.who.int/wormcontrol/documents/maps/en/egypt.pdf> (Accessed 03 Aug 2010). WHO. (2008) Schistosomiasis: A Major Public Health Problem [Online]. Available: <http://www.who.int/schistosomiasis/en/index.html> (Accessed 23 December 2009). [WRI] World Resources Institute. (2007) EarthTrends Database: The Environmental Information Portal [Online]. Available: <http://earthtrends.wri.org/searchable_db/index.php?theme=4> (Accessed 31 December 2008). 39 Anthamatten and Hazen An Introduction to the Geography of Health Chapter 2