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04 November 2024 – The Indian Express

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How does the Climate Change impact the health

Modified pattern of disease-climate relationship:

  • Outbreaks of mosquito-borne diseases no longer follow predicted patterns in terms of periodicity.
  • Throughout the year, dengue fever occurs in two to three peaks.
  • Cycles of disease transmission are disrupted by variations in humidity, precipitation, and temperature.
  • They change where the parasite’s vectors and animal hosts are distributed.
  • Heat modifies the virulence and infectivity of pathogens by interfering with their genetic structure.

 Result for India:

  • In a few States, the Integrated Disease Surveillance Programme (IDSP) was launched in 2007.
  • It last reported 1,714 occurrences in 2017. In 2008, it recorded 553 outbreaks.
  • It was phased out in favour of the Integrated Health Information Platform (IHIP), a web-enabled, nearly real-time electronic information system.
  • Compared to IDSP 13, it added 20 more illness conditions.
  • It might give its users disaggregated data.
  • The programme has not lived up to promises, despite enabling real-time tracking of potential disease epidemics.
  • Climate change would exacerbate India’s dual morbidity burden from non-communicable and communicable diseases.

Climate change’s effects on health:

  • Health is directly impacted by climate change, which increases illness and mortality.
  • It impacts diet, shortens workdays, and heightens stress brought on by the weather.
  • A 2°C increase in global temperature would render many areas of India uninhabitable.
  • Extreme heat, cyclones, and floods are examples of climate crises that are predicted to happen more frequently.
  • These will exacerbate health issues and interfere with livelihoods and food security.
  • It might promote the development of vectors like ticks, sandflies, and mosquitoes and alter the seasonality of infection by altering their life cycle.
  • Additionally, it might make it easier for illnesses and vectors to spread to formerly uninhabited areas—like the Himalayan States, where mosquitoes are found.
  • Additionally, heat modifies a pathogen’s pathogenicity.
  • Vulnerability to illnesses is increased by decreased food and water availability as well as decreased food nutritional content.
  • Floods are a common trigger for epidemics, but prolonged warm weather also encourages the growth of food- and water-borne infections and illnesses.
  • Kidney damage is on the rise in India as a result of uncontrolled diabetes. It can be caused by heat, physical strain, and dehydration—all of which are frequent conditions for labourers.
  • Increased and prolonged exposure to air pollution aggravates chronic obstructive pulmonary diseases.
  • During a heat wave, the chance of dying from lung disease rises by 8–8.2%.
  • Every 1% increase in temperature above 29°C will result in an 8% increase in hospitalisation rates.
  • Climate emergencies are usually accompanied by depression and post-traumatic stress disorder, which are made worse by the stress caused by the weather shift.

Influence on the process of urbanisation:

  • Unplanned urbanisation is the growth of urban areas without the interspersion of parks and greenery.
  • dotted with heat-retaining structures and asphalt roads that obstruct air circulation.
  • Because of the urban heat island effect, they are most negatively impacted by climate change.
  • Particularly at night, urban areas are warmer than the nearby rural areas.
  • The already fragile urban primary health system is increasingly burdened by climate change in addition to the negative consequences of air pollution.
  • urban design that is hostile to exercise.
  • stress from the workplace and culture.

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