Climate change and waterborne pathogens: the El Niño phenomenon and its impact on health
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Keywords

climate change
global warming
infectious diseases
pathogens
Vibrio parahaemolyticus
Vibrio cholerae
El Niño
climate anomalies
epidemiology
oceans

How to Cite

Martínez Urtaza, J. (2011). Climate change and waterborne pathogens: the El Niño phenomenon and its impact on health. Spanish Journal of Environmental Health, 11(1-2), 46–51. Retrieved from https://ojs.diffundit.com/index.php/rsa/article/view/174

Abstract

Global warming induced by human activity has brought about irreversible environmental changes whose consequences are still being analyzed. Of all the affected areas, the coasts are the most volatile zones due to increasing seawater temperatures and rising sea levels. These climatic changes bring about ecological shifts, strongly impacting the biological equilibrium of coastal ecosystems. These same coastal areas are the naturally occurring habitat of the most important human pathogens of Vibrio: V. cholerae and V. parahaemolyticus. For the last year, the interaction of the oceans and climactic anomalies on the dynamics of diseases associated with these pathogens has been studied with the use of oceanographic data provided by satellites. Studies carried out in Peru using these new tools have allowed the epidemic expansion of V. cholerae and V. parahaemolyticus infections in South America to be linked to the arrival and spread of the El Niño waters. Further investigation using remote sensing data to analyze the dynamic of V. parahaemolyticus outbreaks in the USA, Spain and Chile has led to the conclusion that infections in these areas have also concurred with the presence of oceanic anomalies. The movement of oceanic waters has therefore been identified as a potential vehicle for the dispersion of Vibrio infections on a global scale, opening new channels for exploring and predicting new epidemic outbreaks of these diseases.

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