African islands send SOS as climate change worsens health

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African islands send SOS as climate change worsens health

By Nellie Peyton

Dakar: African island states say they need more help to cope with the health impacts of climate change, from worsening nutrition to a resurgence in mosquito-borne disease.

Droughts and unpredictable weather patterns are resulting in tough times for African farmers.

Droughts and unpredictable weather patterns are resulting in tough times for African farmers.Credit: New York Times

At least 23 per cent of deaths in Africa are linked to the environment, the highest of any region worldwide, according to the World Health Organisation (WHO).

This figure is expected to rise as global warming disrupts food supply, water sources and weather patterns, said Magaran Bagayoko, WHO's director of communicable diseases in Africa.

Access to clean water is an ongoing – and growing – problem in many parts of Africa.

Access to clean water is an ongoing – and growing – problem in many parts of Africa.Credit: Bloomberg

Island nations in particular are already struggling to deal with the consequences, he said, speaking from a conference in Gabon on health and the environment where delegates from across Africa will devise an action plan.

"There is a very direct link between the impact of climate change and the cost of healthcare," said Jean Paul Adam, health minister of Seychelles, an archipelago in the Indian Ocean.

The island paradise of the Seychelles has joined the call for climate help.

The island paradise of the Seychelles has joined the call for climate help.Credit: Shutterstock

A disruption in rainfall patterns over the last 10 years has raised the costs of preventing dengue fever, a mosquito-borne virus endemic to Seychelles, he said.

Dengue outbreaks used to happen only during the rainy season, which lasted a few months a year. Now, rain is unpredictable and comes year round, as does the disease, he said.

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"With the disruption of rainfall, dengue is now persistent and continuous," Adam said. "Resources are being diverted towards having to be in a constant state of readiness."

Mosquito-borne diseases such as dengue and zika are expected to become more common, since the mosquitoes that spread them thrive in warmer climates, scientists say.

But mosquitoes are not the only problem.

Climate change causes floods and storms, which can lead to water-borne diseases such as cholera, and diet-related problems through drought and declining food stocks, experts said.

Cape Verde, a group of islands off the west coast of Africa, has struggled with severe drought in recent years and has worked hard to stave off hunger, said health minister Arlindo Rosario.

As local agriculture suffers, people are eating more imported food, which brings a variety of other health problems, such as diabetes and heart disease, he said.

"Climate change hits small countries in a lot of ways," Rosario said.

"I think that when we talk about the impacts of climate change, there should be an international fund for health."

Thomson Reuters Foundation

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