US Climate and Health Alliance

Extreme water-related weather events and waterborne disease

Abstract

Global climate change is expected to affect the frequency, intensity and duration of extreme water-related weather events such as excessive precipitation, floods, and drought. We conducted a systematic review to examine waterborne outbreaks following such events and explored their distribution between the different types of extreme water-related weather events. Four medical and meteorological databases (Medline, Embase, GeoRef, PubMed) and a global electronic reporting system (ProMED) were searched, from 1910 to 2010. Eighty-seven waterborne outbreaks involving extreme water-related weather events were identified and included, alongside 235 ProMED reports. Heavy rainfall and flooding were the most common events preceding outbreaks associated with extreme weather and were reported in 55·2% and 52·9% of accounts, respectively. The most common pathogens reported in these outbreaks were Vibrio spp. (21·6%) and Leptospira spp. (12·7%). Outbreaks following extreme water-related weather events were often the result of contamination of the drinking-water supply (53·7%). Differences in reporting of outbreaks were seen between the scientific literature and ProMED. Extreme water-related weather events represent a risk to public health in both developed and developing countries, but impact will be disproportionate and likely to compound existing health disparities.

Resource Type
Peer-reviewed article
Authors
K. F. Cann D. Rh Thomas R. L. Salmon A. P. Wyn-Jones D. Kay
Resource URL
http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayFulltext?type=6&fid=8843276&jid=HYG&volumeId=141&issueId=04&aid=8843275&bodyId=&membershipNumber=&societyETOCSession=&fulltextType=RV&fileId=S0950268812001653
Publication
Epidemiology and Infection
Journal Abbr.
Epidemiol. Infect.
Volume
141
Issue
4
Pages
671-686
Date
Apr 2013
DOI
10.1017/S0950268812001653
ISSN
1469-4409
Organization Type
Academic
Health and Human Impacts
Infectious disease Water-borne disease
Climate and Environmental Impacts
Extreme weather events Flooding Water

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