HEALTH IN THE HOT ZONE:
How would global warming affect humans?
By Richard Monastersky (April, 1996)
Paul R. Epstein, a specialist in tropical public health, knows
too well the kinds of diseases plaguing the tropical latitudes of
this planet. While working in Mozambique during the late 1970s,
the physician endured a withering bout of cholera that he caught
by eating infected shellfish. During the same trip, his wife and
two children came down with malaria, even though they were taking
prophylactic drugs.
What concerns Epstein, a researcher and clinician at the
Harvard School of Public Health in Boston, is that many millions
of uninitiated people will endure similar lessons, as cholera,
malaria, and other scourges spread in the coming decades. The
unwanted education would come courtesy of global warming, which
could allow diseases to reach into previously unscathed areas.
"I think climate change is a very big threat," says
Epstein. "It's a major wakeup call. Climate change is
already a factor in terms of the distributions of malaria, dengue
fever, and cholera. They are changing their distributions right
now."
Epstein is not alone. In a soon-to-bereleased report, the
United Nation's World Health Organization examines the health
effects of global warmingthe predicted planetary fever
caused by emissions of carbon dioxide and other heat-trapping
gases. The report calls climate change one of the largest pubic
health challenges for the upcoming century. Last year, the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) reached a
similar conclusion, finding that "climate change is likely
to have wide-ranging and mostly adverse impacts on human health,
with significant loss of life."
The issue extends beyond tropical illnesses. Deaths caused
directly by heat would increase during the ever more oppressive
summers. Dwindling agricultural yields in the tropics could leave
tens of millions more people facing hunger and starvation.
Armed with such alarming forecasts, Epstein and his colleagues
have taken their information on the road. They have sounded the
alert at dozens of conferences in the last 2 years.
The new focus on health could bolster the message of
climatologists, whose warnings have received a cool reception
from the public recently. Global warming predictions have tended
to be abstract and easily ignored. Scientists speak of globally
averaged temperature and worldwide sea level rise, factors
removed from everyday life. The concern about health threats may
put a human face on climate change.
Temperature and mortality
For evidence that heat can kill, one need look no farther than
Chicago. When a summer heat wave hit the eastern and midwestern
United States last year, it left more than 500 dead in that city
alone.
By matching daily summertime temperatures with mortality
records in different cities, Laurence S. Kalkstein of the
University of Delaware in Newark has shown that heat waves raise
death rates. Although people may cope with gradually climbing
summer temperatures, most climate models also predict increased
intensity and frequency of heat waves. Kalkstein therefore
anticipates an upward spiral in the number of heat-related
deaths.
The problem is expected to strike most severely in large urban
centers located in the midlatitudes. By the middle of the next
century, giant cities like Shanghai and New York could face
several thousand extra heat casualties each year, he wrote in the
Sept. 30, 1995 LANCET.
During winter, however, warming could have the opposite effect
in some regions. One British study, cited in the IPCC report,
concluded that by 2050, warming of 2° to 2.5°C will save 9,000
lives each year in England and Wales. Most of these people would
otherwise have died from heart disease and stroke, problems
exacerbated by blood's tendency to clot in colder temperatures.
The lives saved would more than balance the increase in deaths
from Britain's relatively mild heat waves, says Anthony J.
McMichael, lead author of the IPCC chapter on human health and a
research er at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical
Medicine.
The United States, though, should not bank on comparable
benefits from global warming. The country's large sizewith
most regions situated far from any coastlinemakes it more
susceptible to extreme hot spells. "Scientists in the United
States expect that there will be more losses in the summer than
gains in the winter," says McMichael.
Tropical trouble
Though heat can kill directly, global warming is expected to
claim even more of its victims through an indirect influence on
disease, particularly on vector borne microbes, which hitch a
ride inside insects and other organisms.
"Many diseases are extremely sensitive to climate,"
says Jonathan Patz of the Johns Hopkins School of Hygiene and
Public Health in Baltimore. "Now that the climatology
community says that climate change is real, we know that there
are going to be shifts in the distribution of many
diseases."
In the Jan. 17 JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION,
Patz, Epstein, and their colleagues reviewed how globe warming
could encourage emerging infectious diseases to spread. Malaria,
the, note, generally does not afflict regions with annual average
temperatures below 16°C, because lower temperatures inhibit the
parasite. As minimum temperatures climb, the disease could spread
into previously malaria free regions.
At present, 45 percent of the world has conditions that permit
malaria transmission. The IPCC estimates that warming of 3° to
5°C could expand the zone of potential transmission to include
60 percent of the globe. Temperatures will reach this point
sometime in the 22nd century, according to model forecasts. The
IPCC predictions call for global average temperatures to rise 1°
to 3.5°C by 2100.
Although malaria has the potential to envelop large parts of
the world, the IPCC panel found it unlikely that the disease will
run rampant through the United States and other developed
countries. These nations have the infrastructure to combat
malaria, both by eliminating mosquito breeding sites and by
treating cases. Although many parts of the United States and
Europe already have climates that could support malaria, the
disease was wiped out in these areas in the 19th century.
The predicted consequences of global warming would fall most
heavily on tropical regions, where malaria could spread in both
latitude and altitude. "A relatively small increase in
winter (minimum) temperature would likely facilitate the spread
of malaria into large urban highland populations that are
currently malaria free and immunologically naive, such as
Nairobi, Kenya, and Harare, Zimbabwe," Patz and his
colleagues contend in their recent article. Because residents of
Nairobi and Harare have little immunity to the disease, malaria
would claim an inordinately large number of people in such
cities.
One study by researchers in the Netherlands estimates that
climate change will cause 1 million extra malaria deaths per year
by the middle of the next century. But such numbers represent
little more than a guess, warn researchers. Epstein points out
that the ongoing spread of drugresistant malarial strains is
likely to make the situation worse than current expectations.
Other vector borne diseases also have the potential to expand
their ranges in a warmer world. Dengue fever has already shown
its ability to respond to changing conditions. In Mexico during a
heat wave in 1988, the mosquito species Aedes aegypti carried
dengue fever from an altitude of 1,000 meters up to 1,700 meters.
Recent warming helped spark an outbreak of dengue that burned
through Latin America this summer. By the end of September, the
disease had infected 140,000 people from Argentina all the way
through South and Central America, eventually reaching into
Texas. More than 4,000 people died. "This was a hell of a
summer. It was quite a massive epidemic," says Epstein.
Waterborne scourges
Future trouble will also come from the seas. According to the
IPCC, global warming should make the oceans a more hospitable
home for cholera and harmful algal blooms.
In 1991, cholera emerged in Peru for the first time this
century. The waterborne illness spread through coastal cities and
waterways, eventually reaching most countries in South America.
In its first 18 months, the epidemic infected 500,000 people and
caused 5,000 deaths.
The cholera plague struck while an El Nino was warming the
waters of the equatorial Pacific, a correlation not lost on
researchers interested in health and climate change.
Scientists know that water temperature affects the spread of
cholera. The bacterium that causes the disease often hitches a
ride inside tiny marine animals called copepods, which feed on
algae. When the water warms, algae bloom and copepod populations
soar. The whole chain leads to an outbreak of cholera. In
Bangladesh, for instance, the incidence of cholera tends to rise
when water temperatures do.
Scientists can't prove that the 1991 El Nino triggered the
South American cholera outbreak, but climate change is likely to
encourage epidemics in the next century, says Epstein.
Harmful algae also find favor in warmer seas. In the past few
years, scientists have tracked a global epidemic in coastal
blooms of toxic plankton that can afflict humans who consume fish
or shellfish.
"Given that many of these harmful algae [thrive at higher
temperatures], warming trends and global climate change will
promote increased activity and also cause them to continue to
expand and extend their ranges," says JoAnn Burkholder of
North Carolina State University in Raleigh.
Greenhouse warming will work together with other factors that
are currently contributing to the algal invasion. Sewage and
agricultural fertilizers abet these plankton by pouring nitrogen
into coastal waters, stimulating the growth of plants. Over
harvesting reduces the fish populations that keep algae in check
Threats such as cholera and malaria, however, may pale in
comparison to the risk of food shortages caused by global
warming. Although increasing concentrations of carbon dioxide
might actually boost global food production in the near future,
prolonged warming and precipitation shifts will probably lower
agricultural yields in many developing countries, according to
the IPCC. Such countries have fewer resources to adapt to
changing conditions, and their climates are already marginal for
certain crops.
One recent study predicted that climate change will put 40
million to 300 million extra people at risk of hunger in 2060.
This population would join the 640 million others expected to
face food shortages by that date even without climate change.
Beyond climate concerns
As the vast range in hunger estimates demonstrates, scientists
are only taking their first steps toward assessing how greenhouse
warming will actually affect people. In its report, the IPCC
admits that its health forecasts are fraught with uncertainty,
notably, how much the climate will change, exactly how diseases
will respond, and to what extent various countries will be able
to protect against future risks.
Complicating the picture even further are the myriad other
threats to health, especially in developing countries.
Increasingly crowded cities, poor sanitation, limited supplies of
potable water, and violence all cause major harm today and will
continue to do so for the foreseeable future.
In fact, some public health researchers worry that the growing
emphasis on global warming could dilute appreciation of some more
important, but perhaps less provocative, factors currently
eroding health around the world.
"My concern is that you can be distracted by what is in
fashion," says Vilma Santana, an epidemiologist at the
Federal University of Bahia in Salvador, Brazil. "I think
the major issue is poverty. One of the most consistent findings
of epidemiological research is that poverty is positively
associated with disease."
Others echo Santana's concern. "Most of my colleagues in
Africa feel that in the face of populations without water,
toilets, basic access to education, and jobs, global warming is
the least threat," says epidemiologist Carolyn Stephens, a
colleague of McMichael's.
Those concerned about global warming counter that climate will
interact with and exacerbate many of these seemingly unrelated
problems. For instance, shifts in rainfall may displace rural
populations, thus squeezing even more people into crowded cities,
where infectious diseases thrive. More frequent droughts would
make water even scarcer than it is today.
"My argument is that climate change is making a bad
situation even worse," says Patz.
He and Stephens agree, however, that climate change will
disproportionately burden developing countries. In this way,
warming will exact the greatest price from populations that can
afford it least.
| MAJOR VECTORBORNE TROPICAL DISEASES
|
| DISEASE |
NUMBER OF PEOPLE
NOW INFECTED (millions)
|
POSSIBILITY THAT CLIMATE CHANGE
WILL ALTER DISTRIBUTION
|
| Malaria |
300-500 |
extremely likley |
| Schistosomiasis |
200 |
very likley |
| Lymphatic filariasis |
117 |
likley |
| Leishmaniasis |
12 |
likley |
Onchoceriasis
(river blindness) |
17.5 |
very likley |
American trypanosomiasis
(Chagas' disease) |
18 |
likley |
| Dengue |
10-30 new cases per year |
very likley |
| Yellow Fever |
<0.005 new cases per year |
very likley |
From: SCIENCE NEWS, published by Science Service Inc., 1719 N.
St. N.W., Washington, D.C. 20036. Phone: 202-785-255
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