Building resilience to mosquito-borne diseases in the Caribbean
Open Access
- 24 November 2020
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Public Library of Science (PLoS) in PLoS Biology
- Vol. 18 (11), e3000791
- https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.3000791
Abstract
Small island developing states in the Caribbean are among the most vulnerable countries on the planet to climate variability and climate change. In the last 3 decades, the Caribbean region has undergone frequent and intense heat waves, storms, floods, and droughts. This has had a detrimental impact on population health and well-being, including an increase in infectious disease outbreaks. Recent advances in climate science have enhanced our ability to anticipate hydrometeorological hazards and associated public health challenges. Here, we discuss progress towards bridging the gap between climate science and public health decision-making in the Caribbean to build health system resilience to extreme climatic events. We focus on the development of climate services to help manage mosquito-transmitted disease epidemics. There are numerous areas of ongoing biological research aimed at better understanding the direct and indirect impacts of climate change on the transmission of mosquito-borne diseases. Here, we emphasise additional factors that affect our ability to operationalise this biological understanding. We highlight a lack of financial resources, technical expertise, data sharing, and formalised partnerships between climate and health communities as major limiting factors to developing sustainable climate services for health. Recommendations include investing in integrated climate, health and mosquito surveillance systems, building regional and local human resource capacities, and designing national and regional cross-sectoral policies and national action plans. This will contribute towards achieving the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and maximising regional development partnerships and co-benefits for improved health and well-being in the Caribbean.Keywords
This publication has 21 references indexed in Scilit:
- Co-developing climate services for public health: Stakeholder needs and perceptions for the prevention and control of Aedes-transmitted diseases in the CaribbeanPLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases, 2019
- Predicting Climate Impacts on Health at Sub-seasonal to Seasonal TimescalesPublished by Elsevier ,2019
- Climate services for health: predicting the evolution of the 2016 dengue season in Machala, EcuadorThe Lancet Planetary Health, 2017
- Epidemiology of Chikungunya in the AmericasThe Journal of Infectious Diseases, 2016
- Three-Month Real-Time Dengue Forecast Models: An Early Warning System for Outbreak Alerts and Policy Decision Support in SingaporeEnvironmental Health Perspectives, 2016
- Zika virus: following the path of dengue and chikungunya?The Lancet, 2015
- DengueThe Lancet, 2014
- Dengue outlook for the World Cup in Brazil: an early warning model framework driven by real-time seasonal climate forecastsThe Lancet Infectious Diseases, 2014
- Malaria early warnings based on seasonal climate forecasts from multi-model ensemblesNature, 2006
- The EI Niño Southern Oscillation and the historic malaria epidemics on the Indian subcontinent and Sri Lanka: an early warning system for future epidemics?Tropical Medicine & International Health, 1996