Marine harmful algal blooms and observed human health effects - what is the evidence?

Exposure to harmful algal blooms (HABs) can lead to well recognised acute patterns of illness in humans. We carried out a scoping review using established methodology to map the evidence for associations between marine HABs and observed both acute and chronic human health effects. A systematic and reproducible search of publications from 1985 until May 2019 was conducted using diverse electronic databases. Following de-duplication, 5301 records were identified, of which 380 were included in the final qualitative synthesis. Most studies (220; 57.9%) related to Ciguatera Poisoning. Anecdotal and case reports were the most frequent study types (242; 63.7%), whereas there were fewer formal epidemiological studies (35; 9.2%). Only four studies related to chronic exposure to HABs. Few studies reported the use of human specimens for confirmation of the cause of illness (32; 8.4%). This study highlighted gaps in the evidence base including a lack of formal surveillance and epidemiological studies, limited use of toxin measurements in human samples, and a scarcity of studies of chronic exposure. Future research and policy should provide a baseline understanding of the burden of human disease to inform the evaluation of the current and future impacts of climate change and HABs on human health.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Young, Nick, Sharpe, Richard A., Barciela, Rosa, Nichols, Gordon, Davidson, Keith, Berdalet, Elisa, Fleming, Lora E.
Format: material didáctico biblioteca
Published: Universität München 2021-12-14
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10261/275028
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!