More disease outbreaks in Europe with Global Warming

EU health experts warn that Europe could face an increase in outbreaks of diseases carried by insects and rodents as the climate on the continent becomes hotter and wetter.

Climate and environmental changes being predicted by experts will alter the risk to Europe from vector-(mosquito, ticks, rats etc) borne diseases,” ECDC head Zsuzsanna Jakab said in a statement.  “We are likely to see the spread of diseases such as tick-borne encephalitis, or even chikungunya fever, to places where they have not been seen before,” she added.

In addition to climate change, the European Union agency also said the risk of such vector-borne diseases, which affect millions of people worldwide each year, was growing due to “globalisation and the increased travel and trade that it brings.”

An example of the increased threat was seen last year, when a traveller who had been infected in India with chikungunya fever was bitten in northern Italy by a type of mosquito that can carry the disease and that recently arrived in Europe.

Nearly 250 people subsequently came down with the illness in what some experts said could be the first such outbreak outside the tropics.

“Authoritative climate scenarios for the future predict that many parts of Europe will become hotter and wetter,” and  these changes are likely to impact on disease vectors, such as mosquitoes  The agency cautioned that tick-borne encephalitis (TBE), which is considered one of the most dangerous infections of the central nervous system.

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