Global Climate Change and Extreme Weather Events: Understanding the Contributions to Infectious Disease Emergence: Workshop Summary
- PMID: 20945574
- Bookshelf ID: NBK45747
- DOI: 10.17226/12435
Global Climate Change and Extreme Weather Events: Understanding the Contributions to Infectious Disease Emergence: Workshop Summary
Excerpt
The Forum on Microbial Threats of the Institute of Medicine (IOM) held a public workshop in Washington, DC, on December 4 and 5, 2007, to explore the anticipated direct and indirect effects of global climate change and extreme weather events on infectious diseases of humans, animals, and plants and the implications of these health impacts for global and national security. Through invited presentations and discussions, invited speakers considered a range of topics related to climate change and infectious diseases, including the ecological and environmental contexts of climate and infectious diseases; direct and indirect influences of extreme weather events and climate change on infectious diseases; environmental trends and their influence on the transmission and geographic range of vector- and non-vector-borne infectious diseases; opportunities and challenges for the surveillance, prediction, and early detection of climate-related outbreaks of infectious diseases; and the international policy implications of the potentially far-reaching impacts of climate change on infectious disease.
Copyright © 2008, National Academy of Sciences.
Sections
- The National Academies
- Forum on Microbial Threats
- Board on Global Health
- Reviewers
- Preface
- Summary and Assessment
- 1. Climate Change Challenges
- 2. Climate, Ecology, and Infectious Disease
- 3. Historical, Scientific, and Technological Approaches to Studying the Climate-Disease Connection
- 4. Policy Implications of the Health Effects of Climate Change and Extreme Weather Events
- Appendixes
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