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With climate change, tackling new disease scenarios

Contact Counsellor

With climate change, tackling new disease scenarios

  • In its latest report released this March, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) delivers a stark warning: climate change heightens the global risk of infectious diseases.

Climate change, more infections

  • Habitat loss forces disease-carrying animals to encroach upon human territory, increasing the risk of human-animal interaction and the transfer of pathogens from wildlife to humans.
  • Viruses which do not harm animals can be fatal for humans.
  • Nipah virus, which has been causing outbreaks in Kerala for many years now, is a good example.
  • Over half of all-known infectious diseases threatening humans worsen with changing climate patterns.
  • Diseases often find new transmission routes, including environmental sources, medical tourism, and contaminated food and water from once-reliable sources.
  • This dynamic introduces invasive species and extends the range of existing life forms.
  • Both these trigger upheavals in ecosystems that are complex and confound ecologists and epidemiologists to predict outbreaks.
  • Human-induced climate change is unleashing an unprecedented health vulnerability crisis.
  • India, in particular, has felt the ominous impact, with early summers and erratic monsoons causing water scarcity across the Gangetic plains and Kerala.
  • These climatic shifts are manifesting in severe health crises, including a dengue epidemic in Dhaka (Bangladesh) and Kolkata and the Nipah outbreak in Kerala.

Surveillance and reporting

  • Changed disease scenarios require a revision of strategies to detect and deal with them.
  • The Integrated Disease Surveillance Programme (IDSP) was rolled out in a few States in 2007.
  • From reporting 553 outbreaks in 2008, it last reported 1,714 in 2017.
  • It was phased out in favour of a new, a web-enabled, near-real-time electronic information system called Integrated Health Information Platform (IHIP).
  • The current design of surveillance is not adequate for the emerging disease scenario.
  • Mitigating the spread of climate change-induced diseases requires safeguarding ecosystems, curbing greenhouse gas emissions, and implementing active pathogen surveillance.
  • A unified approach, termed One Health which integrates monitoring human, animal, plant, and environmental health, recognises this interconnectedness.
  • This approach is pivotal in preventing outbreaks, especially those that originate from animals.
  • It encompasses zoonotic diseases, neglected tropical diseases, vector-borne diseases, antimicrobial resistance, and environmental contamination.
  • India must launch One Health and infectious disease control programmes by building greater synergies between the Centre and States and their varied specialised agencies.
  • Animal husbandry, forest and wildlife, municipal corporations, and public health departments need to converge and set up robust surveillance systems.
  • More importantly, they will need to build trust and confidence, share data, and devise logical lines of responsibility and work with a coordinating agency.
  • So far, the Office of the Principal Scientific Adviser to the Prime Minister has been taking this lead but with new World Bank and other large funding in place, this will need greater coordination and management.

‘Disease x’ and beyond

  • Globally, there is an obsession with the enigmatic “disease X,” but it is the familiar annual cycles of known agents such as influenza, measles, Japanese encephalitis, dengue, diarrhoea among others that will continue to test the public health system.
  • Climate change is not limited to infectious diseases. It also exacerbates injuries and deaths from extreme weather events, respiratory and cardiovascular diseases, and mental health issues.

Conclusion

  • The re-emergence of Nipah in Kerala is a wake-up call, that mere biomedical response to diseases is inadequate.
  • In the face of a changing climate and the growing threat of infectious diseases, protecting ecosystems, fostering collaboration, and embracing the One Health paradigm are our best defences.

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