Climate Afflictions

Bangladesh’s vulnerability to the effects of climate change is well documented; the evidence on the direct relationship between climate change and health focusing on Bangladesh is less so. Global evidence suggests intensification of climate change will increase incidences and variations of infectious diseases. Climate Afflictions contributes to filling this important knowledge gap. It includes a systematic review of existing literature on the relationship between climate change and health, distinguishing between climate change and variability. It establishes the relationship between climate variability and infectious diseases and mental health using household-level data. It also documents changes in climate patterns in Bangladesh over the past 44 years using monthly meteorological data. Overall, the report finds a strong relationship between infectious diseases, mental health, and climate variability. Based on analyses of primary data, it concludes that the prevalence of vector-borne diseases is higher during the monsoon than dry seasons, while the opposite is true for waterborne illnesses. Meanwhile, rising humidity and mean temperature are positively associated with respiratory illnesses. In terms of mental health conditions, while temperature is negatively correlated to depression, anxiety among individuals is likely to increase with temperature and humidity. Irrespective of the season, morbidity and mental health issues are highest in densely populated urban hubs such as Dhaka and Chattogram compared to other areas. The mean temperature in Bangladesh has increased by 0.5°C between 1976 and 2019. Overall, summers are becoming hotter and longer, the monsoon season is extending, and winters are becoming warmer. Consequently, Bangladesh is on the path to losing its distinct seasonality. With global warming progressing faster than initially projected, stresses on human health may be elevated to an extent that can overburden the systems to a point at which adaptation will no longer be possible. Countries susceptible to climate change, like Bangladesh, need to be better prepared.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Mahmud, Iffat, Raza, Wameq A., Hossain, Md Rafi
Format: Book biblioteca
Published: Washington, DC: World Bank 2021-10-07
Subjects:HEALTHCARE, DISEASE CONTROL, CLIMATE CHANGE IMPACT, CLIMATE VARIABILITY, VULNERABILITY, MENTAL HEALTH, HOUSEHOLD SURVEY, MOSQUITO, TEMPERATURE, HUMIDITY, INFECTIOUS DISEASE, DENGUE, MALARIA, DIARRHEA, CHOLERA,
Online Access:https://documents.worldbank.org/en/publication/documents-reports/documentdetail/739621633671881889/climate-afflictions
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/36333
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id dig-okr-1098636333
record_format koha
spelling dig-okr-10986363332021-10-08T16:06:21Z Climate Afflictions Mahmud, Iffat Raza, Wameq A. Hossain, Md Rafi HEALTHCARE DISEASE CONTROL CLIMATE CHANGE IMPACT CLIMATE VARIABILITY VULNERABILITY MENTAL HEALTH HOUSEHOLD SURVEY MOSQUITO TEMPERATURE HUMIDITY INFECTIOUS DISEASE DENGUE MALARIA DIARRHEA CHOLERA Bangladesh’s vulnerability to the effects of climate change is well documented; the evidence on the direct relationship between climate change and health focusing on Bangladesh is less so. Global evidence suggests intensification of climate change will increase incidences and variations of infectious diseases. Climate Afflictions contributes to filling this important knowledge gap. It includes a systematic review of existing literature on the relationship between climate change and health, distinguishing between climate change and variability. It establishes the relationship between climate variability and infectious diseases and mental health using household-level data. It also documents changes in climate patterns in Bangladesh over the past 44 years using monthly meteorological data. Overall, the report finds a strong relationship between infectious diseases, mental health, and climate variability. Based on analyses of primary data, it concludes that the prevalence of vector-borne diseases is higher during the monsoon than dry seasons, while the opposite is true for waterborne illnesses. Meanwhile, rising humidity and mean temperature are positively associated with respiratory illnesses. In terms of mental health conditions, while temperature is negatively correlated to depression, anxiety among individuals is likely to increase with temperature and humidity. Irrespective of the season, morbidity and mental health issues are highest in densely populated urban hubs such as Dhaka and Chattogram compared to other areas. The mean temperature in Bangladesh has increased by 0.5°C between 1976 and 2019. Overall, summers are becoming hotter and longer, the monsoon season is extending, and winters are becoming warmer. Consequently, Bangladesh is on the path to losing its distinct seasonality. With global warming progressing faster than initially projected, stresses on human health may be elevated to an extent that can overburden the systems to a point at which adaptation will no longer be possible. Countries susceptible to climate change, like Bangladesh, need to be better prepared. 2021-10-06T11:04:13Z 2021-10-06T11:04:13Z 2021-10-07 Book https://documents.worldbank.org/en/publication/documents-reports/documentdetail/739621633671881889/climate-afflictions 978-1-4648-1764-6 http://hdl.handle.net/10986/36333 International Development in Focus; CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank Washington, DC: World Bank Publications & Research Publications & Research :: Publication South Asia Bangladesh
institution Banco Mundial
collection DSpace
country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-okr
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca del Banco Mundial
topic HEALTHCARE
DISEASE CONTROL
CLIMATE CHANGE IMPACT
CLIMATE VARIABILITY
VULNERABILITY
MENTAL HEALTH
HOUSEHOLD SURVEY
MOSQUITO
TEMPERATURE
HUMIDITY
INFECTIOUS DISEASE
DENGUE
MALARIA
DIARRHEA
CHOLERA
HEALTHCARE
DISEASE CONTROL
CLIMATE CHANGE IMPACT
CLIMATE VARIABILITY
VULNERABILITY
MENTAL HEALTH
HOUSEHOLD SURVEY
MOSQUITO
TEMPERATURE
HUMIDITY
INFECTIOUS DISEASE
DENGUE
MALARIA
DIARRHEA
CHOLERA
spellingShingle HEALTHCARE
DISEASE CONTROL
CLIMATE CHANGE IMPACT
CLIMATE VARIABILITY
VULNERABILITY
MENTAL HEALTH
HOUSEHOLD SURVEY
MOSQUITO
TEMPERATURE
HUMIDITY
INFECTIOUS DISEASE
DENGUE
MALARIA
DIARRHEA
CHOLERA
HEALTHCARE
DISEASE CONTROL
CLIMATE CHANGE IMPACT
CLIMATE VARIABILITY
VULNERABILITY
MENTAL HEALTH
HOUSEHOLD SURVEY
MOSQUITO
TEMPERATURE
HUMIDITY
INFECTIOUS DISEASE
DENGUE
MALARIA
DIARRHEA
CHOLERA
Mahmud, Iffat
Raza, Wameq A.
Hossain, Md Rafi
Climate Afflictions
description Bangladesh’s vulnerability to the effects of climate change is well documented; the evidence on the direct relationship between climate change and health focusing on Bangladesh is less so. Global evidence suggests intensification of climate change will increase incidences and variations of infectious diseases. Climate Afflictions contributes to filling this important knowledge gap. It includes a systematic review of existing literature on the relationship between climate change and health, distinguishing between climate change and variability. It establishes the relationship between climate variability and infectious diseases and mental health using household-level data. It also documents changes in climate patterns in Bangladesh over the past 44 years using monthly meteorological data. Overall, the report finds a strong relationship between infectious diseases, mental health, and climate variability. Based on analyses of primary data, it concludes that the prevalence of vector-borne diseases is higher during the monsoon than dry seasons, while the opposite is true for waterborne illnesses. Meanwhile, rising humidity and mean temperature are positively associated with respiratory illnesses. In terms of mental health conditions, while temperature is negatively correlated to depression, anxiety among individuals is likely to increase with temperature and humidity. Irrespective of the season, morbidity and mental health issues are highest in densely populated urban hubs such as Dhaka and Chattogram compared to other areas. The mean temperature in Bangladesh has increased by 0.5°C between 1976 and 2019. Overall, summers are becoming hotter and longer, the monsoon season is extending, and winters are becoming warmer. Consequently, Bangladesh is on the path to losing its distinct seasonality. With global warming progressing faster than initially projected, stresses on human health may be elevated to an extent that can overburden the systems to a point at which adaptation will no longer be possible. Countries susceptible to climate change, like Bangladesh, need to be better prepared.
format Book
topic_facet HEALTHCARE
DISEASE CONTROL
CLIMATE CHANGE IMPACT
CLIMATE VARIABILITY
VULNERABILITY
MENTAL HEALTH
HOUSEHOLD SURVEY
MOSQUITO
TEMPERATURE
HUMIDITY
INFECTIOUS DISEASE
DENGUE
MALARIA
DIARRHEA
CHOLERA
author Mahmud, Iffat
Raza, Wameq A.
Hossain, Md Rafi
author_facet Mahmud, Iffat
Raza, Wameq A.
Hossain, Md Rafi
author_sort Mahmud, Iffat
title Climate Afflictions
title_short Climate Afflictions
title_full Climate Afflictions
title_fullStr Climate Afflictions
title_full_unstemmed Climate Afflictions
title_sort climate afflictions
publisher Washington, DC: World Bank
publishDate 2021-10-07
url https://documents.worldbank.org/en/publication/documents-reports/documentdetail/739621633671881889/climate-afflictions
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/36333
work_keys_str_mv AT mahmudiffat climateafflictions
AT razawameqa climateafflictions
AT hossainmdrafi climateafflictions
_version_ 1756575970746171392