Literature DB >> 29557569

Does Forest Loss Increase Human Disease? Evidence from Nigeria.

Julia Berazneva1, Tanya S. Byker1.   

Abstract

It is estimated that about one quarter of the global disease burden in terms of healthy life years lost and about one quarter of all premature deaths can be attributed to modifiable environmental factors (Pruss-Ustun and Corvalan 2006). Three infectious diseases--diarrhea, respiratory infections, and malaria--account for the largest absolute burden in developing countries with children facing the greatest impacts. There is a growing body of evidence demonstrating the health burden of air and water pollution, as well as important productivity and income effects (see, for example, reviews of the literature in Pattanayak and Pfaff 2009 and Greenstone and Jack 2016). Studies that focus on the impacts of natural resource degradation are fewer. Notably, Garg (2016) provides the first causal estimates of the impact of sustained forest cover on reduced malarial incidence in Indonesia, demonstrating a large and previously understudied cost of forest cover loss. In this paper, we extend this new literature on the health impacts of environmental degradation by estimating the causal impact of forest loss on infectious disease incidence in young children using temporal and spatial variation in the last decade in Nigeria. Our estimation strategy involves geolinking a new high-resolution dataset of global forest change to child-level health data from the Nigeria Demographic and Health Surveys from 2008 and 2013. We find that forest loss significantly increases the incidence of malaria, though it does not affect the incidence of diarrhea and respiratory diseases. The impact of forest loss on malaria is large (one standard deviation of forest loss increases malaria incidence by around 4.5 percent in children under five) and the dynamic pattern of the impact suggests a temporary ecological disturbance consistent with findings in Garg (2016) and the tropical medicine literature.

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Year:  2017        PMID: 29557569     DOI: 10.1257/aer.p20171132

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am Econ Rev        ISSN: 0002-8282


  6 in total

1.  Effect of deforestation on access to clean drinking water.

Authors:  Annie Mwayi Mapulanga; Hisahiro Naito
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2019-03-25       Impact factor: 11.205

2.  Deforestation and Household- and Individual-Level Double Burden of Malnutrition in Sub-Saharan Africa.

Authors:  Yubraj Acharya; Saman Naz; Lindsay P Galway; Andrew D Jones
Journal:  Front Sustain Food Syst       Date:  2020-04-03

Review 3.  Achieving global malaria eradication in changing landscapes.

Authors:  Kimberly M Fornace; Adriana V Diaz; Jo Lines; Chris J Drakeley
Journal:  Malar J       Date:  2021-02-02       Impact factor: 2.979

4.  Anthropogenic landscape decreases mosquito biodiversity and drives malaria vector proliferation in the Amazon rainforest.

Authors:  Leonardo Suveges Moreira Chaves; Eduardo Sterlino Bergo; Jan E Conn; Gabriel Zorello Laporta; Paula Ribeiro Prist; Maria Anice Mureb Sallum
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2021-01-14       Impact factor: 3.240

5.  Global consumption and international trade in deforestation-associated commodities could influence malaria risk.

Authors:  Leonardo Suveges Moreira Chaves; Jacob Fry; Arunima Malik; Arne Geschke; Maria Anice Mureb Sallum; Manfred Lenzen
Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2020-03-09       Impact factor: 14.919

Review 6.  Emerging human infectious diseases and the links to global food production.

Authors:  Jason R Rohr; Christopher B Barrett; David J Civitello; Meggan E Craft; Bryan Delius; Giulio A DeLeo; Peter J Hudson; Nicolas Jouanard; Karena H Nguyen; Richard S Ostfeld; Justin V Remais; Gilles Riveau; Susanne H Sokolow; David Tilman
Journal:  Nat Sustain       Date:  2019-06-11
  6 in total

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