Business Day

Climate change cripples fight against disease

• A thousand people in Malawi have died of cholera

- Akshat Rathi

Over the past year, more than 1,000 people in Malawi have died of cholera — a disease that is preventabl­e and easy to treat.

The disease is endemic to the country, but this outbreak has taken more lives than any in the past. And climate change is at least partly to blame.

It began when Malawi, Madagascar, Mozambique and Zimbabwe were hit by a series of cyclones and storms starting in January 2022. That caused floods, deaths and displaceme­nt across the region.

World Weather Attributio­n, a group of scientists that assesses the role of climate change in extreme weather events, said in April that global warming had made those storms more intense than they would otherwise have been, hitting already vulnerable communitie­s harder.

That, in turn, has led to outbreaks of disease that are worse and harder to stem than would otherwise be the case.

“Environmen­t and climate drive a lot of health outcomes,” said Madeleine Thomson, head of climate impacts and adaptation at the Wellcome Trust, a health research charity. “But the health community are not geared up to use climate informatio­n in their programmes.”

Though the link between climate and health outcomes is not yet well understood by practition­ers, the connection­s are increasing­ly clear.

Heatwaves cause thousands of deaths, with many falling victim because their homes are not adapted to hotter weather. The 2022 heatwave in Europe led to 20,000 excess deaths.

Droughts cause starvation and reduced nutrition, which can cause long-term developmen­tal challenges for children and often outright death. Millions in the Horn of Africa, across Djibouti, Ethiopia, Kenya and Somalia, are suffering from the longest drought in 40 years.

There are also “vector-borne diseases” that are caused by viruses, bacteria and parasites but are carried to humans by mosquitoes, ticks or the like. Warmer temperatur­es mean some of these vectors are able to survive and explore newer regions, causing the disease to spread further than before. Climate change also increases the risk of pandemics, with growing human-animal contact driven by disruption­s to ecosystems.

Then there is cholera, a disease of poverty and poor infrastruc­ture. The strains of bacteria that cause cholera spread through the fecal-oral route, which tends to happen in places where there is poor hygiene and a lack of access to clean water.

Treating cholera requires oral rehydratio­n solution, a mix of salts and sugar delivered in clean water. However, when a flood or drought displaces large population­s, delivering either clean water or the solution becomes harder and makes outbreaks worse.

And cholera outbreaks have happened not just in Malawi, but also in flood-hit Pakistan, Nigeria and Mozambique in the past few months.

It was a study of cholera’s link to contaminat­ed water in London, carried out in 1854 by physician John Snow, that gave rise to the field of epidemiolo­gy, the study of disease patterns and prevalence in a population. More than 150 years later, climate change is adding a new dimension to the epidemiolo­gical outcomes of cholera.

“We still have quite a naive global health community that thinks climate is important, but doesn’t know how to integrate climate knowledge into practice,” said Thomson. But that’s “beginning to change”.

In October, the World Health Organizati­on (WHO) and the World Meteorolog­ical Organizati­on (WMO) launched a platform with funding from the Wellcome Trust to provide people with informatio­n to save lives.

Many of the solutions are straightfo­rward, such as improving early warnings of extreme weather events and offering more advice on what to do if you’re affected. But they remain hard to execute because the right informatio­n is not with the right people.

“We often speak with public health practition­ers who ... lack access to training and tailored climate informatio­n needed to address these growing issues,” said Joy Shumake-Guillemot, who leads the WMO-WHO joint effort, in October.

THE GLOBAL HEALTH COMMUNITY THINKS CLIMATE IS IMPORTANT BUT DOESN’T KNOW HOW TO INTEGRATE CLIMATE KNOWLEDGE

Madeleine Thomson Wellcome Trust

RESEARCH AND RESOURCES COULD BE APPLIED TO SUPPORT PUBLIC HEALTH GOALS BUT JUST AREN ’ T REACHING THE RIGHT PEOPLE

Joy Shumake-Guillemote Leader of WMO-WHO joint effort

“On the other side, we have climate experts sitting on troves of research and resources that could be applied to support public health goals, but just aren’t reaching the right people.”

Malawi is one of the poorest countries in the world, which is one reason it struggles with diseases such as cholera in the first place. As the country gets richer and builds better infrastruc­ture, cholera should be banished. But climate change means that its basic developmen­t goals have now become harder to achieve, which means cholera could continue its rampage for longer.

That is not a world Malawi deserves, having contribute­d essentiall­y nothing to the greenhouse gases accumulate­d in the atmosphere.

 ?? /Reuters ?? Protection: A clinician demonstrat­es to clients how to take the cholera vaccine in response to the latest outbreak of the disease in Blantyre, Malawi.
/Reuters Protection: A clinician demonstrat­es to clients how to take the cholera vaccine in response to the latest outbreak of the disease in Blantyre, Malawi.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa