Global Health Press

Climate change ushers in era of uncertainty for infectious diseases

Anthropogenic climate change results from the concentration of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere. This phenomenon is responsible for a relentless upward trend in global temperature. The hottest years ever recorded over 140 years of modern weather record-keeping have all occurred since 1998, and 9 of the 10 have occurred since 2005. The July 2020 global temperature was the highest ever recorded in the Northern Hemisphere for July, and the second-warmest July worldwide. Although discussions of climate change frequently are centered on predictions of a calamitous future, climate change has already increased the incidence and exposure risk for many infectious diseases. A greater frequency of climate-change associated extreme weather events, such as heat waves, drought, and floods, have changed patterns of human migration and created an increased human-to-human transmission risk for novel diseases. Climate change has also resulted in the expansion of the range of numerous pathogenic microorganisms, vectors, reservoirs, and hosts beyond...

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