Rossati Antonella
Department of Infectious Diseases, University Hospital "Maggiore della Carità", Novara, Italy.
Int J Occup Environ Med. 2017 Jan;8(1):7-20. doi: 10.15171/ijoem.2017.963.
Since the mid-19th century, human activities have increased greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide, methane, and nitrous oxide in the Earth's atmosphere that resulted in increased average temperature. The effects of rising temperature include soil degradation, loss of productivity of agricultural land, desertification, loss of biodiversity, degradation of ecosystems, reduced fresh-water resources, acidification of the oceans, and the disruption and depletion of stratospheric ozone. All these have an impact on human health, causing non-communicable diseases such as injuries during natural disasters, malnutrition during famine, and increased mortality during heat waves due to complications in chronically ill patients. Direct exposure to natural disasters has also an impact on mental health and, although too complex to be quantified, a link has even been established between climate and civil violence. Over time, climate change can reduce agricultural resources through reduced availability of water, alterations and shrinking arable land, increased pollution, accumulation of toxic substances in the food chain, and creation of habitats suitable to the transmission of human and animal pathogens. People living in low-income countries are particularly vulnerable. Climate change scenarios include a change in distribution of infectious diseases with warming and changes in outbreaks associated with weather extreme events. After floods, increased cases of leptospirosis, campylobacter infections and cryptosporidiosis are reported. Global warming affects water heating, rising the transmission of water-borne pathogens. Pathogens transmitted by vectors are particularly sensitive to climate change because they spend a good part of their life cycle in a cold-blooded host invertebrate whose temperature is similar to the environment. A warmer climate presents more favorable conditions for the survival and the completion of the life cycle of the vector, going as far as to speed it up as in the case of mosquitoes. Diseases transmitted by mosquitoes include some of the most widespread worldwide illnesses such as malaria and viral diseases. Tick-borne diseases have increased in the past years in cold regions, because rising temperatures accelerate the cycle of development, the production of eggs, and the density and distribution of the tick population. The areas of presence of ticks and diseases that they can transmit have increased, both in terms of geographical extension than in altitude. In the next years the engagement of the health sector would be working to develop prevention and adaptation programs in order to reduce the costs and burden of climate change.
自19世纪中叶以来,人类活动增加了地球大气中二氧化碳、甲烷和一氧化二氮等温室气体,导致平均气温上升。气温上升的影响包括土壤退化、农业用地生产力丧失、荒漠化、生物多样性丧失、生态系统退化、淡水资源减少、海洋酸化以及平流层臭氧的破坏和消耗。所有这些都对人类健康产生影响,导致非传染性疾病,如自然灾害期间的伤害、饥荒期间的营养不良以及慢性病患者因热浪引发的并发症而死亡率上升。直接接触自然灾害也会对心理健康产生影响,而且尽管情况过于复杂难以量化,但甚至已经确定了气候与内乱之间的联系。随着时间的推移,气候变化会通过减少水资源供应、改变和缩减耕地、增加污染、食物链中有毒物质的积累以及创造适合人类和动物病原体传播的栖息地来减少农业资源。生活在低收入国家的人们尤其脆弱。气候变化情景包括随着气候变暖传染病分布的变化以及与极端天气事件相关的疫情变化。洪水过后,钩端螺旋体病、弯曲杆菌感染和隐孢子虫病的病例报告增加。全球变暖影响水温,增加了水传播病原体的传播。媒介传播的病原体对气候变化特别敏感,因为它们在很大一部分生命周期中生活在体温与环境相似的冷血宿主无脊椎动物体内。气候变暖为媒介的生存和生命周期的完成提供了更有利的条件,甚至像蚊子的情况那样加快其生命周期。蚊子传播的疾病包括一些世界上传播最广泛的疾病,如疟疾和病毒性疾病。过去几年,蜱传播的疾病在寒冷地区有所增加,因为气温上升加速了蜱的发育周期、产卵量以及蜱虫种群的密度和分布。蜱虫及其能够传播的疾病的存在区域在地理范围和海拔高度上都有所增加。在未来几年,卫生部门将致力于制定预防和适应计划,以降低气候变化的成本和负担。