Diseases Resurfacing Thanks to Global Warming
There are visible signs of the consequences of global warming everywhere you look—ice caps melting, weather patterns becoming increasingly erratic, and animals migrating because of climate changes. One slightly less visible, though just as nerve-wracking, sign is in the form of an annoying little mosquito buzzing around your ear. Mosquitoes and other insects have long been harbingers of disease, but global warming is allowing them to venture into the newly warmer areas and spread once uncommon ailments to unfamiliar locations. The following are five diseases that, much like Al Gore’s career, have had a comeback thanks to global warming. Dengue Fever Aedes has been detected as far north as the Netherlands. In 1995, a town in Texas experienced a small outbreak of dengue. Chikungunya, a disease with symptoms similar to dengue and carried by Aedes mosquitoes, recently caused a 300-person outbreak in a small town in Italy. According to the World health Organization (WHO), this is the first time a disease only seen in the tropics was found in modern Europe. As higher altitudes become warmer, the dengue-carrying mosquito is also moving to higher ground. Normally limited to elevations of 3,300 feet, in the past three decades, the mosquito has been found at 5,600 feet in Mexico and at 7,260 feet in the Andes. Since mosquitoes thrive in stagnant water, rainstorms and flooding, induced by climate change, have caused epidemics of mosquito and water-borne diseases. When three feet of rain fell on Mumbai in one day in 2005, the flooding caused epidemics of dengue fever and malaria, as well as cholera. Malaria
Up until recently, the United States had completely eradicated malaria, but the Anopheles mosquitoes are present in the U.S. Small outbreaks of locally transmitted malaria have occurred in the past decade in Texas, Georgia, Florida, Michigan, New Jersey, and New York. West Nile In 1999, a severe drought followed by a mild winter may have set the stage for WNV outbreaks. In the summer of 2002, drought and hot weather caused WNV to spread across the U.S. and into Canada, killing 304 people in North America. Rift Valley Fever If global warming continues unabated, weather patterns will become more erratic, bringing stronger storms and floods, creating ideal breeding grounds for the Rift Valley fever virus. Lyme Disease |
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