| Literature DB >> 34602024 |
Gina E C Charnley1,2, Ilan Kelman3,4,5, Kris A Murray1,2,6.
Abstract
Africa has historically seen several periods of prolonged and extreme droughts across the continent, causing food insecurity, exacerbating social inequity and frequent mortality. A known consequence of droughts and their associated risk factors are infectious disease outbreaks, which are worsened by malnutrition, poor access to water, sanitation and hygiene and population displacement. Cholera is a potential causative agent of such outbreaks. Africa has the highest global cholera burden, several drought-prone regions and high levels of inequity. Despite this, research on cholera and drought in Africa is lacking. Here, we review available research on drought-related cholera outbreaks in Africa and identify a variety of potential mechanisms through which these outbreaks occurred, including poor access to water, marginalization of refugees and nomadic populations, expansion of informal urban settlements and demographic risks. Future climate change may alter precipitation, temperature and drought patterns, resulting in more extremes, although these changes are likely to be spatially heterogeneous. Despite high uncertainty in future drought projections, increases in drought frequency and/or durations have the potential to alter these related outbreaks into the future, potentially increasing cholera burden in the absence of countermeasures (e.g. improved sanitation infrastructure). To enable effective planning for a potentially more drought-prone Africa, inequity must be addressed, research on the health implications of drought should be enhanced, and better drought diplomacy is required to improve drought resilience under climate change.Entities:
Keywords: Africa; Vibrio cholerae; climate change; drought; outbreaks
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34602024 PMCID: PMC8812730 DOI: 10.1080/20477724.2021.1981716
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pathog Glob Health ISSN: 2047-7724 Impact factor: 2.894
Search strategy used for MEDLINE, Embase, and GlobalHealth
| Category | Keywords | MEDLINE MeSH | Embase MeSH | GlobalHealth MeSH |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Drought | drought* | Droughts exp | drought exp, water stress exp | drought exp, dry conditions exp, dry season exp, water stress exp |
| Cholera | cholera* OR vibrio cholerae* OR outbreak* | Cholera exp, Vibrio cholerae exp, disease outbreaks exp, epidemics exp | cholera exp, Vibrio cholerae exp, epidemics exp, outbreaks exp | cholera exp, outbreaks exp, vibrio cholerae exp |
Summary of included studies
| Country | Year | Study design | Cases/deaths | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mauritania | 1974 | Nationwide nutritional survey | 149 cases, 29 deaths | [ |
| Mali | 1988 | Case control | 73 cases, 21 deaths | [ |
| Zimbabwe | 1996 | Statistical and mathematical modeling | 1,591 cases | [ |
| Mozambique | 1998 | Descriptive epidemiology | 31,000 cases, 750 deaths | [ |
| Cameroon | 2006 | Outbreak investigation | >5,000 cases | [ |
| Uganda | 2012 | Case control | 641 cases | [ |
Figure 1.Risk factors reported in the included literature, covering those stated as being significant either statistically or not.
Figure 2.Schematic representation of potential risk factor cascades caused by droughts leading to cholera outbreaks in Africa.