Climate Change and the Rise of Infectious Disease in Developing Countries

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Her infection began when she was bitten by a mosquito which was seeking her protein-rich blood to nourish its eggs. As part of the process of sucking the droplet of blood from the girl, the mosquito, simultaneously injected saliva to ease the flow of blood into its proboscis. Malaria-causing pathogens gathered in the mosquito’s salivary glands and traveled into the girl’s body. Once in the body, the wormlike parasites moved to the girl’s liver to embed themselves allowing them to feed and multiply. By the time a week had passed, each parasite had consumed an entire liver cell and had replicated upwards of 40,000 times. A short time later the infected cells had exploded and the parasites had reentered her bloodstream. Now showing symptoms such as headaches, seizures, sweats, and a fever, the girl was carried to a hospital. However, by the time the girl received treatment the damage had been done. The parasite had reached her brain and latched on causing the girl to fall into a coma. With the proper treatment she was able to return to consciousness. However, she would suffer from the same disability as thousands of other malaria victims – permanent brain damage. Infectious disease has always been a bane to man’s existence, but now infectious disease may be, in some ways, just an agent of man’s other foe, man itself. Worse, humanity is largely unaware of the negative ramifications of it actions. This paper intends to argue the causative relationship in which human-caused global climate change is triggering an increase in the prevalence of infectious disease, and is consequently causing thousands of deaths in developing countries each year.
First, some background on the topic is needed. Carbon dioxide gas concentrations in the atmosph...

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