The King Laboratory
of Theoretical Ecology & Evolution
at the University of Michigan


Climate change, urbanization and disease: summer in the city dots

R. C. Reiner, D. L. Smith, and P. W. Gething
Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene 109:  171–172, 2015.

Climate change and urbanization can alter the burden of human diseases. The tropics, a region that includes the poorest populations and highest disease burdens, are expected to get slightly hotter and substantially more urban. Studies have projected changing burdens under different climate or urbanization scenarios, but it remains unclear what will happen if both happen at once. Interactions could amplify disease burdens, improve health overall, or shift burdens around. Social planners need better data on contemporary seasonal disease incidence patterns across the spectrum of climate, urbanicity and socio-economic status. How climate change, urbanization and health interact must be understood to adequately plan for the future.


The official version of the paper is here.  

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