Climate change blamed for fuelling malaria in Kenya
January 10th, 2008 - 2:06 pm ICT by admin
Washington, January 10 (ANI): Medical experts and environmentalists in Kenya blame climate change for fuelling malaria in the country.
Warmer temperatures and variations in rainfall patterns are responsible for the incidences of malaria in areas where they were never expected, they say.
“We are now finding malaria in places that we did not expect to find it, particularly the highland regions that used to be too cool for malaria,” National Geographic quoted Dorothy Memusi, deputy director of the Malaria Division in Kenya’s Ministry of Health, as saying.
In 2004, an international team of researchers had reported that changes in temperature could affect the development and survival of malaria parasites and the mosquitoes that carry them.
The study also found that rainfall influenced the availability of mosquito habitats and the size of mosquito populations.
Now, Shem Wandiga, professor of chemistry at University of Nairobi, has studied the association between climate and malaria.
According to him, it was in the 1920s that malaria epidemics first hit Kenya’s highlands, but the frequency of outbreaks in the region has been more pronounced during the last two decades.
“The best climate conditions for malaria are a long rainy season that is warm and wet, followed by a dry season that is not too hot, followed by a hot and wet short rainy season. Two to three months after that pattern, you see the onset of a malaria epidemic,” Wandiga said.
He conceded that the Kenyan highlands had not suffered an epidemic in the last three years because weather conditions had not been conducive to mosquito propagation.
He, however, said that climate change would continue to show health effects in the region.
“We expect the frequency of diseases to increase and hence the need for early warning and early detection systems,” Wandiga said.
“We need to improve health delivery services to communities to cope with these sudden increases,” he added. (ANI)
- Mosquitoes disappear in some parts of Africa - Aug 31, 2011
- Global warming leads to rise in malaria on Mount Kenya - Dec 31, 2009
- Climate change one big factor in malaria spread - Mar 04, 2010
- Fluctuations in daily temperature may alter malaria patterns - Aug 04, 2009
- Air pollution aggravates drought, flooding - Nov 14, 2011
- Muggy Friday in Delhi, rains likely Saturday - Aug 26, 2011
- Humans behaviour blamed for dengue spread Down Under - May 05, 2009
- Gene-based controls 'could stop mosquitoes spreading malaria' - Apr 21, 2011
- Malaria control to overcome disease spread as climate warms - May 20, 2010
- Kerala Science Congress to focus on climate change - Jan 28, 2012
- Dengue cases cross 500 mark in Delhi - Oct 20, 2011
- Light showers in Delhi Saturday (Second Lead) - Jul 24, 2011
- India might get 1.7-2 degrees warmer by 2030 - Nov 16, 2010
- Heavy rains lash Chandigarh, surrounding areas - Jun 18, 2011
- Drop in CO2 triggered polar ice sheet formation - Dec 02, 2011
Tags: climate change, climate conditions, environmentalists, health delivery services, health effects, highland regions, incidences, kenyan highlands, long rainy season, malaria epidemic, malaria epidemics, malaria parasites, medical experts, ministry of health, mosquito populations, mosquitoes, rainfall patterns, sudden increases, university of nairobi, weather conditions