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malaise

(269,054 posts)
Thu Feb 11, 2016, 07:42 AM Feb 2016

Climate change may have helped spread Zika virus according to WHO scientists

http://www.theguardian.com/world/2016/feb/11/climate-change-zika-virus-south-central-america-mosquitos
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The outbreak of Zika virus in Central and South America is of immediate concern to pregnant women in the region, but for some experts the situation is a glimpse of the sort of public health threats that will unfold due to climate change.

“Zika is the kind of thing we’ve been ranting about for 20 years,” said Daniel Brooks, a biologist at University of Nebraska-Lincoln. “We should’ve anticipated it. Whenever the planet has faced a major climate change event, man-made or not, species have moved around and their pathogens have come into contact with species with no resistance.”

It’s still not clear what role rising temperatures and altered rainfall patterns have had on the spread of Zika, which is mainly spread by mosquitos; the increased global movement of people is probably as great an influence as climate change for the spread of infectious diseases. But the World Health Organization, which declared a public health emergency over the birth defects linked to Zika, is clear that changes in climate mean a redrawn landscape for vector and water-borne diseases.
Should we wipe mosquitoes off the face of the Earth?
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According to WHO, a global temperature rise of 2-3C will increase the number of people at risk of malaria by around 3-5%, which equates to several hundred million. In areas where malaria is already endemic, the seasonal duration of malaria is likely to lengthen. Aedes aegypti, the mosquito that carries Zika and other diseases, is expected to thrive in warmer conditions.
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Climate change may have helped spread Zika virus according to WHO scientists (Original Post) malaise Feb 2016 OP
According to who? jberryhill Feb 2016 #1
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