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Climate Change Makes Children Vulnerable To Infectious Diseases, Finds Study

Globally, it is estimated that children are to bear most of the burden of disease due to climate change, with the poorest disproportionately affected.

New Delhi: Scientists have found that climate parameters accounted for 9 to 18 per cent of the total infectious disease in children under 16 years of age in Varanasi, according to a study.

Climate change driven by anthropogenic activities may challenge the gains in public health over the past many years, particularly in a country like India that ranks high in the list of climate-vulnerable countries in the world, the Science and Technology Ministry said in a statement.

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Globally, it is estimated that children are to bear most of the burden of disease due to climate change, with the poorest disproportionately affected.

The higher risk associated with children is due to the combination of physiological vulnerability as well as the risk of exposure, it said.

The study was undertaken for the first time over the central Indo-Gangetic Plain region. DST-Mahamana Centre of Excellence in Climate Change Research, BHU, explored the association between climate parameters and infectious diseases in a three-year follow-up prospective cohort of 461 children under 16 years of age in Varanasi.

Accounting for extensive socioeconomic household data and child anthropometric measurements, the researchers established that climate parameters like temperature, humidity, rainfall, solar radiation, and wind speed were significantly associated with infectious diseases, gastrointestinal diseases, respiratory diseases, vector-borne diseases, and skin diseases in children.

Maximum temperature and humidity (absolute/relative) are important climate drivers. This study further added that climate parameters accounted for 9-18 per cent of the total infectious disease cases, while non-climate parameters account for the rest.

Upper respiratory tract infection (mostly cold and flu) and gastrointestinal infections (mainly diarrhea) constitute 78 per cent of the disease burden. Socio-economic conditions and child anthropometry modified the climate-disease association with high proportion of children found suffering from stunting, wasting, and underweight conditions, the study found.

Findings from this study draw the attention of government and policymakers to prioritise effective measures for child health as the present association may increase disease burden in the future under climate change scenarios in already malnourished pediatrics population through multiple pathways.

The study further inspires and provides a background for more epidemiological studies to provide evidence for future burden of diseases associated with childhood malady.

However, climate change-related health impacts studies, particularly for children in India, is at an early stage, the study said.

Any attempt to provide the epidemiological evidence association of pediatric health with climate parameters over the poorly investigated region of India will help the policymakers and the government to avert the risk that may arise due to climate change, it said.

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