Lecture Notes Disaster Vulnerability and Resilience
Lecture Notes Disaster Vulnerability and Resilience
Session 4
Lecturer: Paul R. Epstein, MD, MPH; Associate Director, Center for Health and the
Global Environment, Harvard University
Introduction
I. Epidemiological Framework
a. Disease at the confluence of host, agent and environment
II. Ecological-Epidemiological Framework
a. Epidemics at the confluence of social, eco-system, and global
environments
b. Various elements compound the problems of natural hazards
a. Plant migrations
b. Glacial retreat, acceleration
c. Vector-Borne Disease shifts
d. Average Tropical Freezing Level has moved up about 450 feet. El Nino
events correspond with vector-borne disease shifts.
i. Climate affects the range
ii. Weather affects the timing and effect of the outbreak
III. Extreme Weather Events and Disease Clusters
a. El Nino/La Nina
i. Places affected by El Nino events are also affected by vector-borne
diseases: correlation between disease and areas affected by
abnormally wet or abnormally dry areas.
ii. El Nino events are often followed by La Nina events.
b. Precipitation Extremes
i. Past century avg annual precipitation increase of 7%
ii. Heavy rain events increased 14%
iii. Very heavy rain events increased 20%
iv. Western drought: worst in 500 years; devastating rains 2005.
v. In the 20th century, we can only understand the patterns if we
account for greenhouse gases.
c. Hurricane Mitch: Disease Clusters:
i. Mosquito born disease
ii. Water-borne disease
iii. Rodent-borne disease
d. Natural disasters
i. Rise in number
ii. Rise in types of events
e. West Nile Virus
i. Related to drought in the inner city
ii. Disease of wildlife:
1. 230 species animals
2. 138 species birds
3. Ecological ripples:
a. Diseases can be forces of global change
b. Extinction
c. Predator/prey relation instability
IV. Weather Anomalies, Travel Hazards and Trauma
a. More severe winters in Northeast US and Europe
b. Soybean rust (fungal disease in U.S., China, Brazil) expanding across the
united states (major economic, food security threat). Flood fosters fungi,
warm weather allows it to travel.
c. Forest Fires
i. Host: Spruce Trees dries
ii. Pests: Bark Beetles boosted with warming
iii. Fires denude large swaths of land. Crops and forest habitats are in
danger.
b. Coral Bleaching (Warming and Microbes)
i. Habitat changes are affecting coral
ii. Warming allows more microbe growth.
VI. Costs of Emerging Infectious Diseases:
a. Affects trade, travel, tourism, business
b. Insurance/Reinsurance industry is concerned
i. Long-term vision
ii. 1980s: Weather-related events $4 billion/year
iii. 1990s: $40 billion/year
iv. Starting to see real threat of this instability, weighing in with
lobbying in Washington, DC.
Moving Forward
I. Harmonizing Adaptation with Mitigation
a. Need to meet basic needs with clean energy sources
i. Clinics
ii. Homes
iii. Schools
iv. Computers
v. Cooking
b. Water:
i. Purification
ii. Pumping
iii. Irrigation
iv. Desalinization
II. Bring together Regulation, Fund/Subsidies/Tax Incentives, and Institutional
Power to meet these goals:
a. Energy Efficiency
b. Green Buildings/Smart Growth
c. Rationalized Transport and Transit
d. Retrofitting Infrastructure
e. Ecological Reconstruction