Thursday, February 8, 2018

Compounded Impacts of Climate Change: Emerging Health Risks to the World’s Most Vulnerable Populations

Hailey Keuck           October 19, 2017 
The direct consequences of climate variability and change on the health of vulnerable populations are fairly well established, but there is emerging evidence that the indirect consequences are just as insidious, detrimental and widespread.

Which populations are the most vulnerable? Those who may be more susceptible to disease, have preexisting health conditions, live or work in areas that expose them to greater health risks and/or do not have adequate access to the resources they need to deal with major weather stresses effectively. Such populations include women and children, the elderly and disabled, indigenous populations, the LGBTI community, religious minorities and the extreme poor, among others.

The direct impacts of climate change on these groups are clear. For example, heat waves increase the incidence of heat-related illness and death among the elderly since the ability to regulate internal body temperature decreases with age; rising sea levels displace poor coastal communities that live in the most exposed, lowest lying areas; and droughts and floods make inadequate sanitation and hygiene conditions worse in underserved communities, thereby increasing water-borne illnesses like diarrheal disease (the leading cause of death among children under five in developing countries).

The potential indirect impacts of climate change on these populations are only starting to surface and the following examples highlight three of the many emerging health risks that need more attention. 


A farm worker prepares the land for maize planting in Alauca, Honduras. 
Neil Palmer/CIAT 
Kidney disease in El Salvador’s working rural poor 

El Salvador has recently seen a surge in the incidence of chronic kidney disease, a potentially fatal affliction that destroys kidney tissue until waste is no longer filtered from the blood. “You need dialysis or transplantation or you die, and we lose one or two people from this region every week,” García-Trabanino, a Salvadoran kidney specialist says. “It’s poverty, not the disease, that kills them.”

These cases are puzzling as they are not the result of the most common causes of kidney disease - hypertension and diabetes. The disease is mainly afflicting men who work outside, namely farming or fishing. Only when researchers considered recent climate trends did a climate-health link emerge. The rise in average temperatures over the last few years in Central America has been incremental, but the number of extreme events has risen disproportionately, leading Richard Johnson, a kidney specialist at the University of Colorado, to observe that “…the areas that have the highest solar radiation and heatwaves are overlapping the places right where the epidemics are.”

While further research is needed to analyze other potential culprits, researchers believe that heat stress, combined with long-term dehydration, might explain the unprecedented rise in the disease in Central America. They predict kidney disease will be a major health risks globally as temperatures rise.

The men of Tinginaput village, India, return from a hard day’s labour in the fields. 
Abbie Trayler-Smith/DFID 
Suicide among farmers in India
In India, rising temperatures are also impacting poor farmers, but in a drastically different way. New research found that a 1⁰C rise in temperature on a single day during India’s agricultural growing season leads to roughly 65 suicides across the country. The link is subtle – higher temperatures can lead to lower yields or even crop failure, potentially wiping out a poor farmer’s food or income source for the year. With little or no social safety net to fall back on, farmers in many developing countries are left with hard choices when crops fail.

Psychological impacts are only recently being considered under the collection of health impacts of climate change, but according to Norman Anderson, PhD and CEO of the American Psychological Association, “The effects we are likely to see aren’t just trauma from experiencing natural disasters. We can also expect increases in long-term stress and anxiety from the aftermath of disasters.”
Pregnant women at risk from vector-borne diseases

There is emerging evidence that rising temperatures will impact maternal and fetal health in various, devastating ways. In addition to the direct impact of extreme temperatures on pregnant women, rising temperatures are changing the dynamics of many vector borne diseases such as malaria, Zika, and dengue—diseases that cause millions of deaths globally each year and are increasingly linked to stillbirth, low birth weight, spontaneous abortion and in the case of Zika, severe birth defects.
 U.S. assistance improves health, food security, and education in Ethiopia 
USAID 
The causal link between climate change and vector borne diseases is complex, but emerging evidence suggests that temperature is an important determinant of mosquito development, biting rate and survival, as well as development time of the virus in the mosquito (also see here). As physician and epidemiologist Barry Levy explains, this means that “there are places, for example, in East Africa where malaria never occurred because they were at higher elevations and now that temperatures are warmer, malaria is occurring for the first time.”

Research suggests pregnant women are more “appealing” to mosquitos due to physiological changes. Pregnant women produce more exhaled breath and have higher body temperatures than non-pregnant women, both of which attract mosquitoes. Pregnant women also have greater exposure to disease-carrying mosquitos owing to behavioral changes: they leave the protection of their bed net more frequently during the night to urinate.
The road ahead
These emerging climate change health risks are worrisome, but many opportunities exist to address them. Communication campaigns about the dangers of working in high temperatures without proper hydration and critical necessity of early detection of disease based on specific symptoms can be key to saving Salvadorans from early death due to kidney failure. Crop insurance or improvements in rural credit markets may help to protect vulnerable farmers and reduce suicide rates. Strengthening prevention programs for diseases like malaria, dengue and Zika for pregnant women can help reduce complications in pregnancy.

Climate information is key to identifying when and where health risks will emerge, helping to target programs and policies. The good news is that organizations like USAID, the World Health Organization, the World Bank, and the Center for Diseases Control and Prevention recognize the health threat from climate change and are identifying ways to help development practitioners, policy makers and most importantly vulnerable populations prepare for the challenges ahead. 

Hailey Keuck is the Capacity Development and Learning Lead for the ATLAS (Climate Change Adaptation, Thought Leadership and Assessments) Project.

Thanx Hailey Keuck
Jenny the Crusader  and Nanook's Knights

6 comments:

  1. What a great article , Jenny I am so proud of you , Nanook and your Knights are spreading the word that climate change is happening all over the world ...the more people that get involved the better .
    I think some of tRUMP's idiots are beginning to wake up .
    Extreme heat and cold have an effect on people health and the world in general .
    Your daddy has done a great job with you guys by showing you how and where to put your pictures .
    Job well done ... baby girl I am so proud of you and your Knights .
    Kisses and hugs
    Mama

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    1. Hello Mama ,
      Thank you mama , I am ever so proud to be your daughter , we are having fun , some people amaze me to pieces when they try to prove we are wrong and who started us doing this none sense , Sha stepped in and said our mama's spiritual sister in Canada , Sha told and showed her where she was wrong . The Lady look as if she swallowed her tongue . My big sister wiped that smirk off her face with one question , Why has the weather had so many changes , even the meteorological having so much trouble predicting the weather ?
      Thank you mama We are just following your lead , daddy is a great help .
      Kisses and hugs back at you .
      Baby Girl
      Jenny , Nanook and Knights

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  2. Feb.8 ,2018
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    Love Witchy

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    1. Feb. 9 , 2018
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      Love Witchy

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  3. Another wonderful article. It will be a long time before uninformed people recognize the impact climate change has on human health. Crusader, your article is a great example of the damage to the human body that overheating, trauma and dehydration can cause. The WHO is a fantastic organization that studies all these things and the ways that diseases spread and why they spread. There are concerned scientists out there. All we have to do is convince people that climate change is very dangerous to the planet and to our future existence. That doesn't sound too hard...hahahaha!
    Thank you Sha for calling me your mama's spiritual sister. I consider that an honor. I am also honored by her continued friendship and by yours and the other Nanook Knights.
    Love Aunt Jeannie

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    1. Thank you so very much , Nanook's Knights are trying to reach everyone , hopefully we can make them understand that climate change affects everyone and everything big or small , if you think about it this is the worst flu season ever , the germs is riding in the storms , the wind . The oceans are growing warmer , the flu is moving so fast the medical profession can not keep up with the flu shots , they think they got it licked and a stronger version break out .
      The scientists are working hard to get control , they need our help in educating people , it is hard to do with some , so we move on . Poppa told us , if a person do not listen , let them stay dumb , move on to people that wants to learn , poppa told us every person that do not listen there is 5 that will listen and want to learn how to help .

      Sorry I was late getting back to you , we went to watch Man earn his Orange karate belt , he did good , Man asked daddy what did orange mean daddy said what you think your belt means you can defend myself against the average person on the street.
      What your belt actually means son is you can defend yourself against anyone wearing a karate uniform with a flashy orange belt.
      Man said this one is for poppa . I think Sha is going to do her post tonight .
      Thank you aunt Jeannie for being there and for the wonderful person you are .
      Bushels of love
      Jenny the Crusader and Nanook

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