Global warming to increase infectious disease: study

2007-09-20 08:57:48

by Jean-Louis SantiniTue Sep 18, 1:56 PM ET

Global warming likely will lead to an increase in infectious disease around the

world, as viruses, microbes and the agents that spread them flourish, experts

at a medical conference warned Tuesday.

The problem is already evident and has become particularly acute in just the

past decade, according to researchers at a meeting of the American Society for

Microbiology.

"Years ago we probably would not be talking about this topic," said Anthony

McMichael, lead scientist on a study entitled "The Impact of Climate Change on

Human Health."

"Human-induced climate change ... is proceeding a little bit faster than we

would have expected," said McMichael, an epidemiologist at the University of

Canberra in Australia.

Experts cite West Nile virus as a disease whose spread has been facilitated by

global warming.

Native to Africa, West Nile can be found today throughout Canada and the United

States, according to McMichael, who explained that a rise in North American

temperatures since 1999 has allowed non-native mosquitoes that transmit the

virus to thrive.

Jim Sliwa, spokesman for the American Society for Microbiology, underscored the

potential health crisis posed by a rise in world temperatures.

"We know that climate change is going to change the pattern of infectious

diseases," said Sliwa at the conference, which, with some 12,000 physicians and

scientists, is billed as the world's biggest on disease-causing microbes.

For example, he said, "the malaria line in mountainous regions will continue to

rise," as global average temperature increases.

McMichael also predicted a rise in the incidence of "year-round influenza" in

the tropics.

Near the equator, he said "there is no influenza season, so as the temperature

rises the tropical areas expand and we'll get more year-round influenza."

Climate change experts believe that the earth's temperature is likely to rise

by 1.8-4.0 degrees Celsius by the year 2100.

Experts believe diseases worsened by global warming already have contributed to

the deaths of between 150,000 and five million people per year.

In addition to an increase in diseases like malaria and dengue fever, global

warming is likely heighten the incidence of diarrhea, heat waves, drought,

floods and malnutrition.

To prevent a global warming drive health crisis, McMichael said, researchers

will have to begin to think about the interconnectedness of climate and

infectious diseases.

"We are going to have to think within larger integrated terms (and) employ a

more ecological perspective," he said at the conference, which runs through

Thursday.

However, McMichael said there are some areas where infectious disease may be

less virulent as a result of global warming.

"In West Africa, for example, the rate of (malaria) is likely to decline, as

future conditions are getting too hot and too dry for the mosquito," he said,

adding that there has been a 25 percent decline in rainfall over the last three

decades in the Sahara region of Africa.

"Sub-Saharan Africa almost certainly is in an early stage of a climate change

process which we know is tending to displace rainfall systems," McMichael said.