The ecology of climate change and infectious diseases
United States Geological Survey · University of California, Santa Barbara
Abstract
The projected global increase in the distribution and prevalence of infectious diseases with climate change suggests a pending societal crisis. The subject is increasingly attracting the attention of health professionals and climate-change scientists, particularly with respect to malaria and other vector-transmitted human diseases. The result has been the emergence of a crisis discipline, reminiscent of the early phases of conservation biology. Latitudinal, altitudinal, seasonal, and interannual associations between climate and disease along with historical and experimental evidence suggest that climate, along with many other factors, can affect infectious diseases in a nonlinear fashion. However, although the…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 48.02
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 98
Authors
1Topics & keywords
- Climate change
- Infectious disease (medical specialty)
- Globe
- Ecology
- Malaria
- Global warming
- Geography
- Disease
- Climate action