Climate change, malaria and neglected tropical diseases: a scoping review.
Petra KlepacJennifer L HsiehCamilla L DuckerMohamad AssoumMark BoothIsabel ByrneSarity DodsonDiana L MartinC Michael R TurnerKim R van DaalenBernadette AbelaJennifer AkamboeFabiana AlvesSimon J BrookerKaren Ciceri-ReynoldsJeremy ColeAidan DesjardinsChris DrakeleyDileepa S EdiriweeraNeil M FergusonAlbis Francesco GabrielliJoshua GahirSaurabh JainMbaraka R JohnElizabeth JumaPriya KanaysonKebede DeribeJonathan D KingAndrea M KipinguSamson KiwareJan KolaczinskiWinnie J KuleiTajiri L LaizerVivek LalRachel LoweJanice S MaigeSam MayerLachlan McIverJonathan F MosserRuben Santiago NichollsCláudio Nunes-AlvesJunaid PanjwaniNishanth ParameswaranKaren PolsonHale-Seda RadoykovaAditya RamaniLisa J ReimerZachary M ReynoldsIsabela RibeiroAlastair RobbKazim Hizbullah SanikullahDavid R M SmithGloriaSalome G ShirimaJoseph P ShottRachel TidmanLouisa TribeJaspreet TurnerSusana Vaz NeryRaman VelayudhanSupriya WarusavithanaHolly S WheelerAya YajimaAhmed Robleh AbdillehBenjamin HounkpatinDechen WangmoChristopher J M WhittyDiarmid Campbell-LendrumT Déirdre HollingsworthAnthony W SolomonIbrahima Socé FallPublished in: Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene (2024)
To explore the effects of climate change on malaria and 20 neglected tropical diseases (NTDs), and potential effect amelioration through mitigation and adaptation, we searched for papers published from January 2010 to October 2023. We descriptively synthesised extracted data. We analysed numbers of papers meeting our inclusion criteria by country and national disease burden, healthcare access and quality index (HAQI), as well as by climate vulnerability score. From 42 693 retrieved records, 1543 full-text papers were assessed. Of 511 papers meeting the inclusion criteria, 185 studied malaria, 181 dengue and chikungunya and 53 leishmaniasis; other NTDs were relatively understudied. Mitigation was considered in 174 papers (34%) and adaption strategies in 24 (5%). Amplitude and direction of effects of climate change on malaria and NTDs are likely to vary by disease and location, be non-linear and evolve over time. Available analyses do not allow confident prediction of the overall global impact of climate change on these diseases. For dengue and chikungunya and the group of non-vector-borne NTDs, the literature privileged consideration of current low-burden countries with a high HAQI. No leishmaniasis papers considered outcomes in East Africa. Comprehensive, collaborative and standardised modelling efforts are needed to better understand how climate change will directly and indirectly affect malaria and NTDs.
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