The Asian Age

Limiting global warming may check dengue cases

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London, May 29: Limiting global warming to 1.5 degree Celsius could prevent around 3.3 million cases of dengue fever ever year in Latin America and the Caribbean alone, a study has found.

The study published in the journal Proceeding­s of the National Academy of Sciences shows that limiting warming to the goal of the UN Paris Agreement would also stop dengue spreading to areas where incidence is currently low.

A global warming trajectory of 3.7 degree Celsius could lead to an increase of up to 7.5 million additional cases per year by the middle of this century.

Dengue fever is a tropical disease caused by a virus that is spread by mosquitoes, with symptoms including fever, headache, muscle and joint pain.

It is endemic to over 100 countries, and infects around 390 million people aroud the world each year, with an estimated 54 million cases in Latin America and the Caribbean.

Since the mosquitoes that carry and transmit the virus thrive in warm and humid conditions, it is more commonly found in areas with these weather conditions.

“There is growing concern about the potential impacts of climate change on human health. While it is recognised that limiting warming to 1.5 degree Celsius would have benefits for human health, the magnitude of these benefits remains mostly unquantifi­ed,” said Felipe Colon- Gonzalez, lead researcher from University of East Anglia ( UEA) in the UK.

“This is the first study to show that reductions in warming from 2 degree Celsius to 1.5 degree Celsius could have important health benefits,” said ColonGonza­lez, the lead researcher.

The Paris Climate Agreement aims to hold global- mean temperatur­e well below 2 degree Celsius and to pursue efforts to limit it to 1.5 degree Celsius above preindustr­ial levels.

The team studied clinical and laboratory confirmed dengue reports in Latin America and used computer models to predict the impacts of warming under different climate scenarios.

They found that limiting global warming to 2 degree Celsius could reduce dengue cases by up to 2.8 million cases per year by the end of the century compared to a scenario in which the global temperatur­e rises by 3.7 degree Celsius.

Limiting warming further to 1.5 degree Celsius produces an additional drop in cases of up to half a million per year.

Southern Mexico, the Caribbean, northern Ecuador, Colombia, Venezuela and coastal Brazil will be most affected by increases in dengue cases.

Brazil would benefit the most from limiting warming to 1.5 with up to half a million cases avoided per year by the 2050s and 1.4 million avoided cases per year by 2100.

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