| Literature DB >> 17687450 |
Joseph N S Eisenberg1, Manish A Desai, Karen Levy, Sarah J Bates, Song Liang, Kyra Naumoff, James C Scott.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Discoveries that emerging and re-emerging pathogens have their origin in environmental change has created an urgent need to understand how these environmental changes impact disease burden. In this article we present a framework that provides a context from which to examine the relationship between environmental changes and disease transmission and a structure from which to unite disparate pieces of information from a variety of disciplines.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2007 PMID: 17687450 PMCID: PMC1940110 DOI: 10.1289/ehp.9806
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Health Perspect ISSN: 0091-6765 Impact factor: 9.031
Figure 1Environmental determinants of infectious disease (EnvID) framework.
Figure 2Transmission cycle groupings.
Examples of distal environmental changes and diseases they may impact.
| Environmental change | Description | Disease |
|---|---|---|
| Hospitalization | Increased people and time spent in hospitals | Tuberculosis (TB)
|
| Urbanization | Increasing migration to and growth within towns | Dengue fever
|
| Antibiotic usage | Emergence of antibiotic-resistant strains of bacterial pathogens | Multidrug resistant TB and salmonelosis |
| Water projects | Water flow changes due to dam construction and irrigation networks | Schistosomiasis
|
| Agricultural intensification | Changing crop and animal management practices; fertilizer and biocide use; use of genetically modified organisms | Cryptosporiosis
|
| Increased interplay between humans and domesticated animals | Influenza, severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS), avian flu | |
| Deforestation | Loss of forest cover, changing water flow patterns
| Malaria
|
| Transportation projects | Construction of roads, increasing access to remote areas | Malaria
|
| Natural perturbations | Large-scale climate and other changes such as El Niño events | Cholera and leptospirosis |
| Cataclysmic events | Localized landscape changes caused by earthquakes, tsunamis, large fires, and other | Water-related diseases like cholera |
| Climate change | Changing temperature and precipitation | Malaria, dengue fever, and schistosomiasis |
Figure 3Matrix for mapping the relationship between proximal environmental characteristics and transmission cycles. GMO, genetically modified organism.
Figure 4Importance of ecologic and social processes from different transmission groups.
Figure 5Causal diagram of the relationship between roads and diarrheal disease.