Literature DB >> 24152918

The climate change-infectious disease nexus: is it time for climate change syndemics?

Claire Heffernan1.   

Abstract

Conceptualizing climate as a distinct variable limits our understanding of the synergies and interactions between climate change and the range of abiotic and biotic factors, which influence animal health. Frameworks such as eco-epidemiology and the epi-systems approach, while more holistic, view climate and climate change as one of many discreet drivers of disease. Here, I argue for a new paradigmatic framework: climate-change syndemics. Climate-change syndemics begins from the assumption that climate change is one of many potential influences on infectious disease processes, but crucially is unlikely to act independently or in isolation; and as such, it is the inter-relationship between factors that take primacy in explorations of infectious disease and climate change. Equally importantly, as climate change will impact a wide range of diseases, the frame of analysis is at the collective rather than individual level (for both human and animal infectious disease) across populations.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 24152918     DOI: 10.1017/S1466252313000133

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Anim Health Res Rev        ISSN: 1466-2523            Impact factor:   2.615


  1 in total

1.  A hot topic at the environment-health nexus: investigating the impact of climate change on infectious diseases.

Authors:  Lena C Grobusch; Martin P Grobusch
Journal:  Int J Infect Dis       Date:  2021-12-29       Impact factor: 12.074

  1 in total

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