The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Climate change will fuel diseases, warns Global Fund

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GENEVA, Switzerlan­d: Climate change will end up killing people by fuelling infectious diseases, the head of the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculos­is and Malaria said Tuesday.

Executive director Peter Sands said that in 2022, the fund had witnessed the “escalating impact” of climate change on health.

While upsurges in malaria had hitherto been seen due to the increasing frequency and devastatio­n of tropical storms, “with the flooding in Pakistan it was taken to a completely different scale”, he said.

“What we are seeing is that the mechanism by which climate change will end up killing people is through its impact on infectious disease.”

Sands said that parts of Africa which previously were unaffected by malaria are now becoming at risk as temperatur­es rise and allow mosquitos to thrive, notably at higher altitudes.

However, the population in such areas will not have immunity, with the resulting risk of a higher mortality rate.

“It’s quite alarming,” Sands told a briefing with the UN correspond­ents’ associatio­n.

Other threats include tuberculos­is spreading among the increasing number of displaced people around the world.

“TB is a disease that thrives on having concentrat­ions of highly-stressed people in close confines with inadequate food and shelter,” he said.

“The more that we see climate change-driven displaceme­nt of people, the more I think that will translate into the conditions that will at least make it more likely.”

Sands also said food insecurity would make people more vulnerable to disease.

As for whether the world was better prepared for the next pandemic than it was for Covid19, Sands said it was, but added: “That doesn’t mean we are well prepared: we’re just not as badly prepared as we were before.”

By the end of 2022, Sands said the Global Fund will have invested around US$5.4 billion, which is significan­tly more than it has ever done before.

The Geneva-based organisati­on’s largest donors are G7 government­s, led by the United States and France.

“For the people we serve in the poorest, most marginalis­ed, most vulnerable communitie­s in the world, 2022 was a brutal year,” said Sands.

“In the poorest communitie­s in the world, HIV, TB and malaria are killing many more people than Covid-19.”

 ?? — AFP file photo ?? A child getting a malaria vaccinatio­n at Yala Sub-County hospital, in Yala, Kenya.
— AFP file photo A child getting a malaria vaccinatio­n at Yala Sub-County hospital, in Yala, Kenya.

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