
Diseases Take Flight with Climate Change
The changing climate is providing opportunities for insects and other animals to spread infectious diseases to new populations
In September 2018, Gaurab Basu received an email alerting him that one of his patients, a man in his late 60s, had just been hospitalized with unexplained fever and confusion. Basu, an HMS instructor in medicine, primary care physician, and co-director of the Center for Health Equity Education and Advocacy at Cambridge Health Alliance, suspected that his patient might have an infection, but the cause was unclear. “It took some real detective work to figure out what it was,” Basu says. A lumbar puncture finally pinpointed the source of his patient’s malaise: West Nile virus, a mosquito-borne pathogen more common to the tropics than New England in early autumn. Basu had never encountered the virus in any of his patients and says the diagnosis “came as a real surprise.”
All over the world, doctors like Basu are contending with the consequences of significant changes in the distribution and prevalence of vector-borne infectious diseases. West Nile fever surfaced in the United States in 1999 and has since become the country’s most common mosquito-borne illness, affecting thousands of people every year. The disease is also spreading into Europe, along with other mosquito-borne diseases such as dengue and chikungunya, while in Africa malaria is moving into higher elevations.
Tick-borne diseases are also on the move. Cases of Lyme disease, anaplasmosis, and Powassan encephalitis have more than doubled throughout the United States throughout the past two decades, as the ticks that transmit these illnesses expand into new areas, according to Ben Beard, deputy director of the Division of Vector-Borne Diseases at the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Fort Collins, Colorado.
Several factors explain these trends, not least among them demographic and land-use changes that bring people and infectious disease vectors closer together. “But many models suggest that temperature is a dominant driver,” says Jason Rohr, an infectious disease biologist and chair of the Department of Biological Sciences at the University of Notre Dame.
“A disease that becomes more prevalent and severe in one place may become less so somewhere else and another may reveal a different temporal and geographic pattern.”
Critical aspects of a vector’s lifecycle, such as its growth, reproductive capacity, and biting rates, are temperature dependent. Temperature also influences rainfall patterns that in turn affect vector habitats. In general, mosquitoes lay eggs in standing water, and ticks thrive in humid weather. For them, “drought is death,” says Sam Telford, professor of infectious disease and global health at the Cummings School of Veterinary Medicine at Tufts University.
As global mean temperatures rise steadily with climate change, efforts to model and predict future trajectories for vector-borne diseases are taking on a new urgency. Climate “profoundly influences the effectiveness of different kinds of health interventions,” says Matthew Bonds, an associate professor of global health and social medicine in the Blavatnik Institute at HMS. “By modeling the complex interactions of multiple hosts, viruses, and temperature, we seek to identify the most effective strategies for reducing the risk of disease emergence.”
Temperature creep
That climate contributes to the spread of infectious diseases has long been known. In ancient Rome, for example, aristocrats would retreat to hillside resorts in summer to avoid malaria, a disease whose name derives from the Latin mal + aria, or “bad air.”
Now climate change is affecting the infectious disease landscape in profound ways. Greenhouse gases resulting from the burning of fossil fuels have pushed mean global temperatures higher by just over 1°C since 1850. If the most recent projections from the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) hold true, global average temperatures could rise by more than 1.5°C over the next 20 years, leading to dramatically higher sea levels; longer and more frequent heat waves; and extreme weather events, which are unusually severe weather or climatic conditions that, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, devastate communities and agricultural and natural ecosystems.
According to the IPCC, each incremental increase in global temperatures will lead to more deaths from infectious diseases and other causes. Yet not all vector-borne diseases will respond in the same way, or uniformly, to increases in mean global temperatures, says David Relman, MD ’82, the Thomas C. and Joan M. Merigan Professor in Medicine and professor of microbiology and immunology at Stanford University. As the climate warms, “a disease that becomes more prevalent and severe in one place may become less so somewhere else and another may reveal a different temporal and geographic pattern,” he notes. In 2008, Relman was the chair of the National Academy of Sciences panel that examined how climate change and extreme weather could affect the emergence of infectious diseases.
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Rohr agrees, adding that many scientists have abandoned what was once a basic assumption in infectious disease modeling, namely, that a vector’s performance, that is, its capacity to thrive and infect people, increases linearly with rising temperature. Current models, Rohr says, which capture nonlinear relationships between warming and performance better than previous models, show that transmission of disease increases with rising temperatures—up to a point. Excessive heat beyond what vectors and pathogens can tolerate can slow transmission “and then diseases begin to decline,” Rohr says.