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Climate change is increasing our risk of exposure to disease

Heat, land use, and habitat loss from climate change all contribute to increased risk of infectious disease.
Climate change is increasing our risk of exposure to disease
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As Earth's climate changes, animals that carry diseases are shifting their habitats in response — and changing the risk of infectious disease as they go.

Ticks, mosquitoes, and even smaller carriers like bacteria and algae are moving around as they adjust to rapid changes in temperature and available habitat. They may be corralled into closer contact with other species, or experience longer periods of warm months that allow them to flourish.

At the same time, human exploitation of natural resources and the sprawl of urban development is extending our reach into once-wild spaces.

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Together, these climate-driven shifts are causing new patterns of human disease.

The incidence of disease borne by infected mosquitoes, ticks and fleas tripled between 2004 and 2016, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The World Health Organization estimates that malaria will contribute to a quarter million additional excess deaths from 2030 to 2050.

And experts warn climate shifts will likely affect the risk of diseases reaching pandemic scale.

"I think we’ve drastically underestimated not only how much climate change is already changing disease risks, but just how many kinds of risks are changing," Colin Carlson, a global change biologist at Georgetown University told The Associated Press. "I think there’s a lot more to worry about in terms of epidemic and pandemic threats."


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