A Review of National-Level Adaptation Planning with Regards to the Risks Posed by Climate Change on Infectious Diseases in 14 OECD Nations
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methods
2.1. Scientific Literature Selection
2.2. Adaptation Plan Selection
Disease type | Disease | Environmental factors impacting disease dynamics | Countries likely to be affected |
---|---|---|---|
Mosquito-borne diseases | Malaria | Increased average temperatures | Australia, New Zealand, Chile, Southern Europe |
West Nile Virus | Increased average temperatures, drought | USA, Southern Europe, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Chile | |
Dengue, Chikungunya fever, Yellow fever | Increased average temperatures | New Zealand, Mediterranean region (coastal areas in Spain, Portugal and France), Chile | |
Tick-borne diseases | Lyme borreliosis, tick-borne encephalitis, | Increased daily precipitation, humidity, changed patterns of seasonal precipitation, Increased average temperatures, extreme heat | Northern Europe, Canada, USA |
Waterborne diseases | Sewage and sanitation: Vibrio vulnificus and Vibrio cholera, E.Coli, Campylobacter, Salmonella, Cryptosporidium, Giardia, Yersinia, Legionella | Increased rainfall and storm frequency, flooding, landslides, increased average temperatures, extreme heat episodes | All countries |
Food borne diseases | Salmonellosis, campylobacteriosis | Extreme rainfall, flooding, increased average temperatures, increased frequency of extreme heat, changed seasonal patterns | All countries |
1. Key Word Search | Terms used: |
1.1 English | “climate change”, “global warming” AND/OR “infectious disease”, “communicable disease”, “zoonos*s”, “waterborne disease”, “food*borne disease”, “vector*borne disease” |
1.2 French | “changement climatique”, “réchauffement climatique” AND/OR “maladies infectieuses”, “maladies à transmission vectorielle”, “maladies émergentes”, “maladies diarrhéiques”, “maladies d’origine hydrique”, “intoxications alimentaires”, “maladies d’origine alimentaire”, “zoonoses” |
1.3 Spanish | “cambio climatico”, “calienmente global” AND/OR “enfermedades transmisibles”, “enfermedades infecciosas”, “zoonosis”, “enfermedades de transmisiόn vectorial”, “enfermedades transmitidas por el agua/ por los alimentos”, “enfermedades emergentes” |
2. Inclusion Criteria | Exclusion Criteria |
English, French, Spanish documents | Non-English, French, Spanish |
Technical documents, Adaptation Plans, National Reports, Adaptation Assessments, Vulnerability Assessments containing recommendations. | Editorials, Meetings and Conferences, Abstracts |
Human Adaptation to Climate change | Natural and/or biodiversity focus, focus on climate change mitigation |
Practical focus (detailing adaptation activities or actions) | Enumeration and assessments of vulnerabilities only, description of the problem and potential hazards only, conceptual documents only. |
OECD Nations | Non-OECD Nation |
2.3. Analysis
3. Results and Discussion
3.1. Infectious Disease Adaptations Proposed in the Literature
Topic | Recommendation |
---|---|
Occupational Health | Identify vulnerable professional groups [39] |
Develop suitable protective clothing and gear [39,40] | |
Heighten workplace awareness of infectious disease risks [39] | |
Waterborne Disease | Ensure adequate water supply and quality [18,40,41,42,43,44,45,46,47,48,49] |
Increase drinking & recreational water quality monitoring in relation to specific climate and weather patterns (e.g.,: increased precipitation) [42,45,50,51] | |
Create advisory platforms and improve outreach [42,43] | |
Improve watershed protection and management [18,40,42,46,52] | |
Develop new drug therapies for waterborne diseases [42] | |
Develop membrane filters to address cyanotoxicity [43,53] | |
Consider water-pathogen source placement (e.g.,: cattle farms) [18,49] | |
Improve wastewater disposal and municipal water systems [51] | |
Involve nursing staff in community microbiological water testing [51] | |
Food-borne Disease | Enforce appropriate food production, monitoring and handling standards [48,50,54,55,56,57] |
Provide public education campaigns to promote good practices in food preparation [42,54,55] | |
Increase monitoring of preparation practices within institutions [54] | |
Develop a national integrated system of food tracking from farm to fork [45,54] | |
Incentivize the local production of food [54] | |
Intensify existing food safety programs during warmer periods and optimize food disinfection protocols [43,58] | |
Provide freezer programs for hunting communities [47] | |
Vector-borne disease | Develop vaccines for human and animal host-species [1,18,40,42,59,60,61,62] |
Link human health and veterinary sciences in public health practice [59] | |
Create or strengthen animal and wildlife sentinel surveillance systems [45,57,59] | |
Implement preventive strategies for sustainable livestock production [59] | |
Harmonize case reporting across regions and national boundaries [63] | |
Improve vector control [1,18,40,42,55,57,60,61,64,65,66] | |
Strengthen preparedness and response to extreme weather events [64] | |
Encourage individual level adaptations such as the use of mosquito nets [1,40,47,55,57,60,62,64,67,68] | |
Domestic water tank screening, urban runoff capture and improved urban drainage systems [18,54,60] | |
Incorporate fly screens in construction norms [54] | |
Implement adequate goods-importation laws and monitoring [42] | |
Supplement current surveillance programs with additional surveillance sites for monitoring [56,62] | |
Surveillance | Further develop genomic surveillance [69] |
Develop novel disease and vulnerability indicators [39,56,61,67,70] | |
Expand disease tracking surveillance programs [1,18,42,50,52,56,57,61,66,71,7273] | |
Surveillance | Collect data on environmental risks to perfect integrated monitoring and forecasting systems [1,18,41,51,54,56,61,62,63,64,67,69,72,74,75,76,77,78,79] |
Collect data on vulnerabilities and identify vulnerable populations [18,41,42,54,61,72,75,80] | |
Perfect early-warning and syndromic surveillance systems integrating environmental, ecological, veterinary and epidemiological data [18,41,42,55,57,61,62,64,70,81,82] | |
Ensure adequate data collection and data quality [1,47,57,64,65,70,72,74,81] | |
Develop the use proxy measures and interpolation when data may be unavailable [74] | |
Develop spatial analysis technologies with greater integrative analysis capabilities than current GIS software [52,57,67,73,75,79] | |
Increase the ability to share data and information across jurisdictions [42,57] | |
Improve the timeliness of access to laboratory testing and its results [42] | |
Integrate multidisciplinary knowledge in surveillance and risk assessments [47,56,57,61,67,72] | |
Integrate community participation in surveillance [19,61,70] | |
General Strategies, and Capacity Building | Provide education about ID risks of CC, individual adaptation measures and/or mainstreaming in existing health promotion programs [1,41,47,51,57,61,64,66,83] |
Provide regular (and updated) workforce training [41,42,57,73,84] | |
Prepare health care workers and public health professionals to potential ID risks of CC [39,42,61,80,81,82,84] | |
Incorporate ID risks of climate change in medical and university training curricula and create new training programs [1,41,42,50,59,61,81,85,86] | |
Develop and validate new diagnostic tests protocols [18,59,69] | |
Involve stakeholders and the media to increase awareness and identify alternative adaptation options [19,54,59,73] | |
Build capacity by increasing infrastructure and research capabilities, the provision of adequate funding, equipment and trained staff [57,59,64,73,80,81] | |
Focus adaptation efforts to vulnerable communities [18,52,57,64,80] | |
Improve vaccination coverage and public immunization campaigns [57,60,61,64,67] | |
Cooperate with relevant sectors : meteorology, environment, urban planning, hydrology, agriculture [56,61,64,78,79,80] | |
Emphasize adaptive management, constant monitoring and evaluation, and the implementation no-risk options [54,61] | |
Improve access to preventive and primary care [1,42,50,57,61,80] | |
Improve laboratory infrastructure and testing capabilities [42] | |
Conduct cost-effectiveness analyses of proposed adaptation strategies [76] | |
Improve forecast modeling [55,62,78,82,87,88,89] | |
Assess stakeholder conceptualizations and approaches to health [72,90] | |
Evaluate opportunities for policy intervention (effectiveness, desirability, feasibility, urgency, equity, durability) with the use of scenarios [72] | |
Create community and stakeholder partnerships, encourage social involvement and foster social networks. [19,61,72,90] |
3.2. National-Level Adaptation Planning for Infectious Disease Risks of Climate Change
Country | Adaptation Plan | Drafting Body |
---|---|---|
Australia | National Climate Change Adaptation Framework [92] National Climate Change Adaptation Research Plan: Human Health (Update: 2012) [93,94] | Council of Australian Governments
National Climate Change Adaptation Research Facility |
Belgium | Plan National Climat de la Belgique 2009–2012 [95] | Commission Nationale Climat: Groupe de Travail Politiques et Mesures |
Canada | Climate Change Impacts and Adaptation: A Canadian Perspective [96] From Impacts to Adaptation: Canada in a Changing Climate 2007 [97] | Climate Change Impacts and Adaptation Directorate
Government of Canada |
Chile | National Climate Change Action Plan 2008–2012 [98] | National Environmental Commission
Gobierno de Chile |
France | L’adaptation de la France au changement climatique [99] Plan national d’adaptation de la France aux effets du changement Climatique 2011–2015 [100] | Observatoire national sur les effets du réchauffement climatique
Ministère de l'écologie, du développement durable, et de l’énergie |
Spain | Cambio Global España 2020/50. Cambio climático y salud [101] | Centro Complutense de Estudios e Información Medioambiental & Instituto Sindical de Trabajo, Ambiente y Salud &
Sociedad Española de Sanidad Ambiental |
Switzerland | Adaptation aux changements climatiques en Suisse: Objectifs, défis et champs d’action Premier volet de la stratégie du Conseil fédéral du 2 mars 2012 [102] Les changements climatiques et la Suisse en 2050: impacts attendus sur l'environnement, la société et l'économie [103] | l’Office fédéral de l’environnement
ProClim—Forum for Climate and Global Change |
UK | Department of Health: Climate Change Plan [104] Health Effects of Climate Change in the UK 2012 Current evidence, recommendations and research gaps [105] The National Adaptation Programme [106] | Central Office of Information for the Department of Health
Health Protection Agency DEFRA |
USA | Climate Change and Health program website
Progress Report of the Interagency Climate Change Adaptation Task Force: Recommended Actions in Support of a National Climate Change Adaptation Strategy 5, October, 2010 [107] HHS Climate Change Adaptation Plan [108] | Centers for Disease Control
The White House Council on Environmental Quality Department of Health & Human Services |
Country | Awareness of CC Impact on ID Dynamics | Evidence for Adaptation Strategies/Plans in PH | Infectious Disease-Specific Adaptation Measures |
---|---|---|---|
Australia | √ | √ | √ |
Belgium | √ | √ | |
Canada | √ | √ | √ |
Chile | √ | √ | √ |
France | √ | √ | √ |
Ireland | √ | ||
Luxembourg | |||
Mexico | √ | ||
New Zealand | √ | ||
Slovenia | √ | √ | |
Spain | √ | √ | √ |
Switzerland | √ | √ | √ |
UK | √ | √ | √ |
USA | √ | √ | √ |
3.3. Classification of Adaptation Options and Between-Plan Comparisons
Adaptations Proposed | Classification of Adaptation strategies | Consideration of Vulnerable Populations | Sectoral or Holistic | Initiative or Mainstreaming | Nation Proposing |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ensure that existing surveillance systems are sensitive and efficient enough to detect new threats in a timely manner | Avoiding or reducing the risks | No | Sectoral | Mainstreaming | UK, France, Spain, USA, Canada, Australia, Switzerland |
Strengthen surveillance systems which currently lack the capacity to integrate zoonotic and environmental data in disease detection | Avoiding or reducing the risks | No | Holistic | Mainstreaming and Initiative if development of new knowledge | UK, France, Spain, USA, Canada, Australia, Chile |
Ensure that surveillance systems have the capacity to detect vector-borne diseases whose range is suspected to change (integrate epidemiological and environmental data) | Avoiding or reducing the risks | No | Sectoral | Mainstreaming | UK, USA, Chile, France, Spain, Canada, Australia |
Increase awareness of potential effects of climate change within the public health surveillance, public health planning, infectious disease and medical communities | Creating supportive social structures | No | Holistic | Mainstreaming | Chile, France, Canada, Australia, Switzerland |
Integrate climate and precipitation data in forecast and predictive models for the purposes of public health intervention & Use the growing scientific evidence base to inform the preparedness and responsiveness | Gathering and sharing of new information & exploiting new opportunities | No | Sectoral | Mainstreaming | Chile, France, Spain, USA, Canada, Australia, Switzerland |
Increase the capacity for or continue to ensure appropriate water sanitation and water quality monitoring | Avoiding or reducing the risks | No | Sectoral | Mainstreaming | New Zealand, UK, USA, France, Canada, Australia, Switzerland Spain |
Conduct water-consumption hygiene outreach campaigns | Avoiding or reducing the risks | No | Sectoral | Mainstreaming | France, UK, Chile, Belgium, Australia, Spain |
Strengthen food quality regulation and monitoring | Avoiding or reducing the risks & creating a supportive institutional framework | No | Sectoral | Mainstreaming | France, UK, Canada, Australia, Spain |
Invest in strategies for vector control | Bearing the risk | No | Sectoral | Mainstreaming | Chile, Canada, Australia, Spain |
Increase networking between sectors and jurisdictional levels | Creating supportive social structures | No | Holistic | Mainstreaming | Chile, UK, USA, Canada, Australia, Switzerland |
Increase education and public outreach campaigns | Gathering and sharing of information | No | Sectoral | Mainstreaming | New Zealand, Spain, UK, France, USA, Canada, Australia, Switzerland |
Improve resilience to climate effects for the most vulnerable in society | Bearing the risks | Yes | Sectoral | Mainstreaming | UK, USA, New Zealand, Canada, Australia, Spain |
Carry out an economic assessment of preventive measures, as well as infrastructure and personnel needs | Gathering and sharing of information | No | Sectoral | Mainstreaming | Chile, Canada, Australia, Switzerland |
Strengthen the capabilities of health personnel to address prevention and care of adverse effects caused by climate change | Gathering and sharing of information & Creating supportive social structures & Institutional framework | No | Sectoral | Mainstreaming | USA, Canada, Australia, Spain, France |
Create a multidisciplinary expert group for planning, evidence assessment and the formulation of recommendations | Exploiting new opportunities & Gathering and sharing of information & Creating supportive social structures | No | Holistic | Innovative (though not a new concept, it is a new body) | France, USA (BRACE), Australia |
Explicit statement regarding the need to evaluate implemented strategies | Gathering and sharing of information | No | Sectoral | Mainstreaming | USA, Canada, Australia, Switzerland, France |
Fostering international cooperation | Gathering and sharing of information & Creating supportive social structures | No | Sectoral | Mainstreaming | Canada, Chile, Spain, Switzerland, France |
4. Conclusions
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Panic, M.; Ford, J.D. A Review of National-Level Adaptation Planning with Regards to the Risks Posed by Climate Change on Infectious Diseases in 14 OECD Nations. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2013, 10, 7083-7109. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph10127083
Panic M, Ford JD. A Review of National-Level Adaptation Planning with Regards to the Risks Posed by Climate Change on Infectious Diseases in 14 OECD Nations. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2013; 10(12):7083-7109. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph10127083
Chicago/Turabian StylePanic, Mirna, and James D. Ford. 2013. "A Review of National-Level Adaptation Planning with Regards to the Risks Posed by Climate Change on Infectious Diseases in 14 OECD Nations" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 10, no. 12: 7083-7109. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph10127083
APA StylePanic, M., & Ford, J. D. (2013). A Review of National-Level Adaptation Planning with Regards to the Risks Posed by Climate Change on Infectious Diseases in 14 OECD Nations. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 10(12), 7083-7109. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph10127083