Skip Navigation

Climate Change and Human Health Literature Portal Adaptation of animal and human health surveillance systems for vector-borne diseases accompanying climate change

Climate Change and Human Health Literature Portal

Halabi SF
2020
Journal of Law, Medicine & Ethics. 48 (4): 694-704

Anthropogenic climate change is causing temperature rise in temperate zones resulting in climate conditions more similar to subtropical zones. As a result, rising temperatures increase the range of disease-carrying insects to new areas outside of subtropical zones, and increased precipitation causes flooding that is more hospitable for vector breeding. State governments, the federal government, and governmental agencies, like the Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) of USDA and the National Notifiable Disease Surveillance System (NNDSS) of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, lack a coordinated plan for vector-borne disease accompanying climate change. APHIS focuses its surveillance primarily on the effect of illness on agricultural production, while NNDSS focuses on the emergence of pathogens affecting human health. This article provides an analysis of the current framework of surveillance of, and response to, vector-borne infectious diseases, the impacts of climate change on the spread of vector-borne infectious diseases, and recommends changes to federal law to address these threats.

Expand Abstract

Resource Description

    General Exposure, Ecosystem Change
    Global or Unspecified Location
    Infectious Disease
    • Infectious Disease: Vectorborne Disease
      • Vectorborne Disease: General Vectorborne Disease
      Vectorborne Disease
    Review Article
    Adaptation, Policy, Research Gap
    • Adaptation, Policy, Research Gap: Intervention
Back
to Top