The Mosquito vs. the Modern Nation State: Climate Change and Dengue Fever in India
The McGill International Review
Kody Corwell, January 19, 2018
The Mosquito vs. the Modern Nation State: Climate Change and Dengue
Fever in India
"Away with a pæan of derision
You winged blood-drop.
Can I not overtake you?
Are you one too many for me
Winged Victory?
Am I not mosquito enough to out-mosquito you?"
So says the penultimate stanza of D.H.
Lawrence’s 1920 poem The Mosquito, which reflects
upon the insignificant yet seemingly defiant nature of the “winged ghoul” and
its “hateful little trump.” Lawrence manages to capture humanity’s ancient
adversary – a small insect with a significant impact on human history. Today, their perverse
dangers continue to threaten advanced nation-states – states that have
otherwise survived colonialism, natural disasters, the slave trade, proxy wars,
trade embargos, despotic regimes, and economic recessions. Their range is impressive,
aided by travel and exploration: even previously isolated island states have
seen increases in invasive mosquito species over the past few centuries,
largely due to Western exploration.
In this file photo, people suffering from high fever sit with their
relatives to see a doctor at a fever clinic at Ram Manohar Lohia hospital in
New Delhi. (Source: AP)
Zika continues to rip through South and
Central America, with no clear answers in sight. In
Africa, the burden of diseases transmitted by infected mosquitoes is
disproportionately high: 90% of malaria deaths occur on the
African continent, while others still manage to keep hold in tropical or
sub-tropical environments:yellow fever, chikungunya, and dengue, to name a few. In recent years,
these viruses have expanded in geographic range and have even surged in areas
where severe dengue outbreaks were relatively rare, as demonstrated by the
recent outbreaks of dengue virus in India.
Of course, it is hardly a surprising
fact that the Indian subcontinent shares a burden of tropical disease given its
favourable temperature, humidity, and precipitation patterns which allow
mosquitoes to thrive. What is perhaps more shocking is the revelation that some
of these aforementioned diseases, such as Dengue fever, are on
the rise, likely as a result of changing climates. According to the CDC,
dengue virus is already a leading cause of illness and death in tropical and
subtropical regions, with as many as 400 million infected with dengue
hemorraghic fever per year. While the disease itself has been around for
centuries, the rise of the global trade industry and increased urbanization let
to higher transmission rates. Today, about 40% of the world’s population
live in high-risk areas.
A new vaccine exists, and while efforts to
control the primary mosquito vector,Aedes aegypti, have shown some
effect, the global burden of the disease hasincreased drastically in the past
few years which will only get worse in the current climate: according to
a recent review in The Lancet, the
public health impacts of climate change are predicted to worsen in the future,
spurring an increased capacity for transmission of dengue by the mosquito Aedes
aegypti. While the review outlines the importance of financing resilience,
public health research, and adaptation measures, the urgency of the issue is
not quite there.
Climate change poses multiple public health threats to
humanity including heat waves, changes in labour capacity, extreme weather
events, food insecurity, and climate migrants, disproportionately affecting the
vulnerable, low-income populations. So it is with India, which, while having
stark and widespread economic disparities in
many regions and widespread urban squalor (also projected to
increase), is also poised to be one of the countries most
affected by climate change. This combination of
socioeconomic, climate, and demographic factors is what influences disease distribution. One
study has noted that the global incidence of dengue has increased 30-fold over
the past few years, suggesting harmonized surveillance
and improved vaccination campaigns (though the new vaccines are not projected
to be released in India until 2019/2020).
In 2016, it was reported that India had the world’s
highest dengue burden withover 11,500 cases. However, India is
not isolated in its risk for dengue. A warming planet could not only lead to a
strengthened grip of dengue in India and other tropical regions, but also to
the spread of dengue to Europe and
high-altitude mountainous regions. While climate change can answer many
questions regarding the spread of the disease, it is ultimately the effect of
poor urban planning, accumulation of waste, and poor sanitation practices which
allow dengue to establish itself in
regions like India. Urbanization and increased international travel also
work in concert with changing climates to
aid in the spread of the disease. Indeed, cities provide the perfect
environments for Aedes mosquitoes to breed and unlike the
malaria-carrying Anopheles mosquito, Aedes aegypti bites
during the day, making vector control using traditional methods such as bed
nets ineffective.
Chemical control through insecticides
is a popular prevention to date (although
these come with their own slew of problems), while another emerging technique
which has proven itself to be highly effective is the use of sterilized male mosquitoes to
control future breeding. The effect of these mutant insects on the greater
environment is not yet known. There is also a growing call for better
collaboration between public health scientists, biologists, and virologists.
Proactive environmental management and
community participation have also shown to be effective in dengue
control. In India and elsewhere, awareness campaigns regarding
mosquito-borne diseases such as dengue have shown some success, urging citizens
to cover exposed skin and to engage in clean up any collected water which may
become a breeding place for the insects. A case study in Vietnam (also a victim
of rising dengue outbreaks) showed that cleaning outstanding water and
introducing predators which feed on mosquito larvae eliminated the incidence of
dengue fever in 40 of 45 tested communities. Better sanitation resources and
waste management systems in cities will also be critical in the fight against dengue
epidemics. Access to piped water might also influence
dengue incidence.
Some have pointed out that, in the
public health interest of international states to lessen disease mortality,
states should be obligated to assist vulnerable and
low-resource areas in preventing mosquito-borne diseases such as dengue. Within
states, improving structural inequalities that pre-dispose impoverished
populations to dengue fever infection is necessary. However, these goals are
rather nebulous and not well-defined. In general, without a coherent
response to climate change and its exacerbating impacts on human
health, billions of lives are jeopardized. Dengue itself is considered
a neglected tropical disease (NTD),
one which receives much less funding than HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, and malaria.
Moreover, compared to these three diseases, it has a much smaller mortality
rate. However, this does not cheapen the risk NTDs like dengue pose, for if
anthropogenic climate factors truly do increase transmission rates into the
near future, then it deserves a larger share of the global research
agenda. Otherwise, larger populations of people will be placed in peril,
imposing a higher burden of existing cases for nations to tackle, and in
matters of public health, no nation is an island.
Reference; https://www.mironline.ca/mosquito-vs-modern-nation-state-climate-change-dengue-fever-india/
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