If you look
on the bright side, when you think of the health effects of climate
change you probably think of fewer sub-zero spells and, therefore,
fewer cold-related illnesses and deaths. Maybe. But in a warmer world,
as I wrote last year, poison ivy and ragweed will get more prevalent and more toxic, and tropical diseases such as malaria and dengue fever will reach toward the poles. Those, it turns out, are only the tip of the (melting) iceberg.
Avian influenza:
The highly pathogenic H5N1 strain is deadly to domestic and wild birds,
as well as humans, and could evolve into a strain that can spread from
human to human. Climate changes such as severe winter storms and
droughts can disrupt normal movements of wild birds, bringing avian flu
to new regions and bringing domestic birds into greater contact with
wild, disease-harboring ones at water sources if rainfall declines.
Babesiosis:
Becoming more common in humans in Europe and North America as climate
change alters the distribution of the ticks that transmit this disease.
Cholera: This water-borne diarrheal disease, caused by the Vibrio cholerae bacterium, is highly temperature dependent, so rising global temps are expected to increase its incidence.
Ebola:
Outbreaks of this hemorrhagic fever (and the related Marburg fever) are
related to unusual variations in rainfall/dry season patterns, which
climate change disrupts.
Intestinal and external parasites: Their prevalence is expected to rise as temperatures and precipitation levels shift.
Lyme disease: As tick distributions shift as a result of climate change, Lyme disease will reach new regions.
Plague:
One of the oldest infectious diseases known, it is spread by rodents
and their fleas, whose distribution will change with shifts in
temperatures and rainfall.
“Red tides”: These algal blooms are deadly to both humans and wildlife, and may become more common as the climate changes.
Rift Valley Fever:
Potentially fatal in people, it is carried by mosquitoes, which
threaten to reach into cooler climes and proliferate as the world warms.
Sleeping sickness: Trypanosomiasis is caused by a protozoan and transmitted by the tsetse fly, whose distributions could change as climate does.
Tuberculosis:
The bovine form exists worldwide, infecting humans in southern Africa
through the consumption of un-pasteurized milk. Droughts caused by
climate change are likely to increase the contact of wildlife and
livestock at limited water sources, increasing transmission of the
disease between livestock and wildlife and livestock and humans.
Yellow fever: The disease-causing virus is also carried by
mosquitoes, which will spread into new areas as temperatures rise and
precipitation patterns shift.