Recognition that human health is affected by a wide range of ecological disruptions consequent upon climate change is a recent development, reflecting the breadth and sophistication of modern scientific knowledge. Global climate change affects human health via pathways of varying complexity, scale, and directness and with different timing. Similarly, impacts vary geographically due to both environment and topography and the local population’s vulnerability. This is no surprise since climate change alters an extensive range of natural ecological and physical systems integral to earth’s life support system.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Explore More

Institutionalization of EIDM curriculum into government and research institutions in Kenya and Malawi

Evidence has an important role to play in improving policy, programme and practice decisions that ultimately improve development effectiveness. However, decision-making processes are complex and evidence often competes with many

The Growing Antimicrobial Resistance from Agricultural Practices

Wide scale antimicrobial usage in animal farming accelerates antimicrobial-resistant (AMR) bacteria which is spread onto the human population that consume the products and the environment into which livestock farming wastes

Improving diagnosis, treatment and outcomes of sepsis patients in low- resource settings

Sepsis is a condition where a severe infection triggers the immune system to act in a dysregulated way, attacking the organs, causing organ damage and even death. It can be