Modelling Climate Change and Malaria Transmission

被引:0
|
作者
Parham, Paul E. [1 ]
Michael, Edwin [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ London Imperial Coll Sci Technol & Med, Dept Infect Dis Epidemiol, Grantham Inst Climate Change, London W2 1PG, England
来源
MODELLING PARASITE TRANSMISSION AND CONTROL | 2010年 / 673卷
关键词
VECTOR-BORNE DISEASES; BASIC REPRODUCTION NUMBER; NINO-SOUTHERN-OSCILLATION; ANOPHELES-GAMBIAE; DYNAMICS; RAINFALL; ARABIENSIS; HEALTH; FUTURE;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
R-3 [医学研究方法]; R3 [基础医学];
学科分类号
1001 ;
摘要
The impact of climate change on human health has received increasing attention in recent years, with potential impacts due to vector-borne diseases only now beginning to be understood. As the most severe vector-borne disease, with one million deaths globally in 2006, malaria is thought most likely to be affected by changes in climate variables due to the sensitivity of its transmission dynamics to environmental conditions. While considerable research has been carried out using statistical models to better assess the relationship between changes in environmental variables and malaria incidence, less progress has been made on developing process-based climate-driven mathematical models with greater explanatory power. Here, we develop a simple model of malaria transmission linked to climate which permits useful insights into the sensitivity of disease transmission to changes in rainfall and temperature variables. Both the impact of changes in the mean values of these key external variables and importantly temporal variation in these values are explored. We show that the development and analysis of such dynamic climate-driven transmission models will be crucial to understanding the rate at which P falciparum and P vivax may either infect, expand into or go extinct in populations as local environmental conditions change. Malaria becomes endemic in a population when the basic reproduction number R-0 is greater than unity and we identify an optimum climate-driven transmission window for the disease, thus providing a useful indicator for determing how transmission risk may change as climate changes. Overall, our results indicate that considerable work is required to better understand ways in which global malaria incidence and distribution may alter with climate change. In particular, we show that the roles of seasonality, stochasticity and variability in environmental variables, as well as ultimately anthropogenic effects, require further study. The work presented here offers a theoretical framework upon which this future research may be developed.
引用
收藏
页码:184 / 199
页数:16
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Assessing the role of climate factors on malaria transmission dynamics in South Sudan
    Mukhtar, Abdulaziz Y. A.
    Munyakazi, Justin B.
    Ouifki, Rachid
    MATHEMATICAL BIOSCIENCES, 2019, 310 : 13 - 23
  • [42] Modeling and Optimal Control Analysis for Malaria Transmission with Role of Climate Variability
    Keno, Temesgen Duressa
    Dano, Lemessa Bedjisa
    Makinde, Oluwole Daniel
    COMPUTATIONAL AND MATHEMATICAL METHODS, 2022, 2022
  • [43] Climate-dependent malaria disease transmission model and its analysis
    Gashaw, Kassahun Workalemahu
    Kassa, Semu Mitiku
    Ouifki, Rachid
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF BIOMATHEMATICS, 2019, 12 (08)
  • [44] Predicting and mapping malaria under climate change scenarios: the potential redistribution of malaria vectors in Africa
    Tonnang, Henri E. Z.
    Kangalawe, Richard Y. M.
    Yanda, Pius Z.
    MALARIA JOURNAL, 2010, 9
  • [45] Downscaling reveals diverse effects of anthropogenic climate warming on the potential for local environments to support malaria transmission
    Paaijmans, Krijn P.
    Blanford, Justine I.
    Crane, Robert G.
    Mann, Michael E.
    Ning, Liang
    Schreiber, Kathleen V.
    Thomas, Matthew B.
    CLIMATIC CHANGE, 2014, 125 (3-4) : 479 - 488
  • [46] Climate change, genetic markers and species distribution modelling
    Gotelli, Nicholas J.
    Stanton-Geddes, John
    JOURNAL OF BIOGEOGRAPHY, 2015, 42 (09) : 1577 - 1585
  • [47] Hysteresis in simulations of malaria transmission
    Yamana, Teresa K.
    Qiu, Xin
    Eltahir, Elfatih A. B.
    ADVANCES IN WATER RESOURCES, 2017, 108 : 416 - 422
  • [48] Modelling urban land change processes and patterns for climate change planning in the Durban metropolitan area, South Africa
    Jagarnath, Meryl
    Thambiran, Tirusha
    Gebreslasie, Michael
    JOURNAL OF LAND USE SCIENCE, 2019, 14 (01) : 81 - 109
  • [49] Modelling the effect of climate change on grapevine water relations
    Schultz, HR
    Lebon, E
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE SEVENTH INTERNATIONAL SYMPOSIUM ON GRAPEVINE PHYSIOLOGY AND BIOTECHNOLOGY, 2005, (689): : 71 - 78
  • [50] Modelling the Evolution of Economic Structure and Climate Change: A Review
    Ciarli, Tommaso
    Savona, Maria
    ECOLOGICAL ECONOMICS, 2019, 158 : 51 - 64