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Climate Change Pushing Tropical Diseases Toward Arctic
Wed, 2017-06-14 22:00 — Kathy GilbeauxTemperature changes around the globe are pushing human pathogens of all kinds into unexpected new areas, raising many new risks for people.
Bathers on the Baltic have recently been confronted with a new threat: dangerous disease that is normally only found in warm water. PHOTOGRAPH BY PRIIT VESILIND, NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC CREATIVE
news.nationalgeographic.com - by Craig Welch - June 14, 2017
. . . It's no secret that climate change can spread illnesses such as West Nile virus, Zika, and malaria, as rising temperatures push disease-carrying mosquitoes into new places, from the highlands of Ethiopia to the United States. But warm temperatures and shifting weather patterns work in subtle ways, too. Changes in precipitation, wind, or heat are shifting the threat posed by other human illnesses, from cholera to a rare freshwater brain-eating amoeba to rodent-driven infections like hantavirus. And the importance of all these changes are only growing more significant.
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