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Experts Use Weather to Predict Disease

by Medindia Content Team on Jan 26 2007 12:07 PM

Doctors hoping to predict disease outbreaks may want to tune into more weather forecasts. Weather patterns can often be a key factor in finding out when an epidemic is imminent because they determine the conditions for germs and their carriers to breed.

The techniques can help quicken the response to viral outbreaks worldwide and health disasters like Europe's devastating 2003 heat wave and global warming is adding urgency to such strategies for fighting disease.

Health officials were able to lessen the impact of an ongoing outbreak in Kenya of Rift Valley Fever, a deadly hemorrhagic fever, after NASA scientists noticed exceptionally warm sea temperatures and elevated rainfall in east Africa four months ago.

When flooding in Kenya started soon after, NASA climate expert Assaf Anyamba was certain the elements were in place for an outbreak namely, ideal breeding conditions for the mosquitoes that transmit the disease.

"By the end of October, this outbreak was pretty much a lock," he said.

Anyamba and his colleagues at NASA and other agencies track climatic factors that influence disease outbreaks, including levels of precipitation, atmospheric moisture, and vegetation.

This information is then passed to organizations including the World Health Organization and the Food and Agriculture Organization, which in turn relay it to the affected countries.

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The last major outbreak occurred in Kenya in 1997, at exactly the same time of year, and killed approximately 400 people. The response was so slow that that by the time international experts landed in Kenya to fight the outbreak, it was already over.

This time around, the response was much quicker, partly due to the public health community's ability to predict the virus' arrival. Health officials flew to Kenya within days of the virus' confirmation in December, and the death toll has so far been limited to 104 people.

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"Looking at the weather forecasting and satellite imaging data in November, we were already thinking, 'Rift,'" said Dr. Pierre Formenty, a WHO disease expert who was recently in Kenya to help contain the outbreak.

Once the Kenyan government was informed of the likelihood of an outbreak, they outlawed the sacrificing of cows, camels, goats and sheep during the Muslim Eid festival. That was done to minimize the contact between humans and infected animals, and is believed to have cut the risk factor for virus transmission to humans.

Rift Valley Fever is not the only disease affected by weather. Any disease spread by insects such as malaria, yellow fever or encephalitis is highly dependent on the conditions needed for the insects' survival, such as warm temperatures and plenty of water to breed.



Source-Bio-Bio Technology
SRI


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