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Malaria. Dengue Fever. Encephalitis. These names are not usually heard in emergency
rooms and doctors offices in the United States. But if we dont act to curb
global warming, they will be. As temperatures rise, disease-carrying mosquitoes and
rodents spread, infecting people in their wake. Doctors at the Harvard Medical School have
linked recent U.S. outbreaks of dengue ("breakbone") fever, malaria, hantavirus
and other diseases to climate change.
Dengue Fever
Dengue, or
"breakbone", fever is a mosquito borne disease related to yellow fever. Unlike
its relative, however, there is no vaccine against dengue. One strain of the disease,
hemorrhagic dengue fever, is often deadly, and doctors in the U.S. and other areas into
which it is expected to spread have little experience diagnosing or treating it.
The range of the mosquito which carries dengue fever is limited by temperatures. Frost
kills both adults and larvae. In the past, this has prevented the disease from spreading
from the tropics, but rising temperatures are changing that. It has moved steadily north
in recent decades, and to higher elevations. In the United States the mosquito which
carries dengue has reached as far north as Chicago.
Dengue fever has already infected victims in the US. When McAllen, Texas suffered an
outbreak of the disease in 1995, the Houston Chronicle's headline read, "Warming
Climate Invites Dengue Fever to Texas."
Malaria
Like dengue fever, malaria is
a mosquito borne illness normally limited by temperatures. Rising temperatures have
expanded its range, and exposed new populations to infection. IPCC scientists project that
as warmer temperatures continue to spread north and south from the tropics and to higher
elevations, malaria-carrying mosquitoes will spread with them. They project that global
warming could put as much as 65 percent of the worlds population at risk of infection by
malaria.
Here in the United States malaria infections are already on the rise. Houston has
experienced a malaria outbreak in each of the last two years. In the last three years
malaria cases have occurred as far north as New Jersey, Michigan and Queens, New York. In
1997 an outbreak occurred in Florida, striking the Disney World theme park, and mosquitoes
carrying the illness were discovered in New York.
Cholera and Encephalitis
Climate-related
increases in sea surface temperatures and sea level can lead to higher incidence of
water-borne infectious and toxin-related illnesses such as cholera and shellfish
poisoning; zooplankton which can harbor cholera proliferate in warmer water temperatures,
and provide a potential environmental reservoir for the disease. Cholera killed 120,000
world-wide people in 1995, most of them children.
Outbreaks of encephalitis, another illness with strong links to warmer temperatures,
also appear to be on the rise. Since 1987 there have been major outbreaks in Florida,
Mississippi, New Orleans, Texas, Arizona, California, and Colorado.
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