Is Climate Change Affecting The Spread Of Disease?
A warming climate could negatively impact Hawaii residents’ ability to fight off diseases like the flu and COVID-19, and will enable the spread of more ailments.
Disease has been top-of-mind for weeks now, and Civil Beat readers have been asking how climate change will affect the spread of diseases 鈥 from the flu to dengue fever 鈥 in Hawaii. The ,” our Q&A environmental podcast, puts those questions to an expert.
Unlike most of the country, Hawaii has a year-round flu season, partially because of our large number of visitors but also due to the tropical climate.
鈥淗umidity has outside the body depending on what the temperature is,鈥 said Marta Shocket, a researcher studying how temperature affects the spread of disease at the University of California at Los Angeles. 鈥淐old, dry environments are really good for the flu but if it’s warm year-round, humidity actually helps flu survive.鈥
Which is why there鈥檚 no guarantee that higher yearly temperatures due to climate change will limit the spread of flu.
Climate change could actually lead to more flu transmissions.
Researchers from analyzed flu seasons from 1997 to 2013 and found that large flu outbreaks followed mild winters.
“It appears that fewer people contract influenza during warm winters, and this causes a major portion of the population to remain vulnerable into the next season, causing an early and strong emergence,” wrote the authors. “And when a flu season begins exceptionally early, much of the population has not had a chance to get vaccinated, potentially making that flu season even worse.”
Additionally, our immune systems , and we鈥檙e more vulnerable to the flu , like in a sudden cold snap.
Scientists don鈥檛 yet know how changing seasons will impact the spread of COVID-19, but preliminary research found that the coronavirus was less sensitive to changes in temperature than the yearly flu, Shocket said.
鈥淚t’s really unclear right now how big of an effect that might have,鈥 Shocket said.
Climate change has also already affected the spread of mosquitoe-borne illnesses in Hawaii. Historically mosquitoes, and the diseases they carry, couldn鈥檛 thrive at high elevations because it was too cold.
But as temperatures creep up, mosquitoes gain territory. There鈥檚 already been disastrous effects on native bird populations that live high in the mountains to escape mosquitoes.
鈥淚f the mosquitoes can be successfully transmitting disease all the way up the mountain, then those birds will no longer have a cold-weather refuge,鈥 Schocket said.
And as those mosquitoes make their way into higher elevations, there are more opportunities for humans to catch mosquitoe-borne illnesses like , and .
The burning of fossil fuels and also pollutes the air, which can cause chronic conditions like , and .
鈥淚f carbon emissions are making it tough to be healthy and resilient out of the gate it makes us more susceptible to a pandemic or other illnesses … especially respiratory illnesses and that鈥檚 what COVID-19 is,鈥 said Josh Stanbro, Honolulu鈥檚 chief resilience officer.
鈥淓very day that we put off dealing with it exponentially ramps up the costs, how many people are affected and the impact to our economy,鈥 Stanbro said. 鈥淭his is true of climate change and this coronavirus.鈥
鈥淭he analogy between COVID-19 and climate is really glaring in terms of the disaster that awaits us if we don鈥檛 respond quickly,鈥 he said.
鈥淎re We Doomed? And Other Burning Environmental Questions鈥 is funded in part by grants from the Environmental Funders Group of the Hawaii Community Foundation and the Frost Family Foundation.
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