Abstract
Recent advances in knowledge about the climate system have increased the ability of meteorologists to forecast extreme weather and climate events, such as floods and heatwaves. Public health agencies and authorities have had limited involvement in the development of early warning systems to take advantage of these forecasts to reduce the burden of disease associated with extreme events. Instead, public health has focused on surveillance and response activities to identify disease outbreaks following an extreme event. Although these systems are critical for detecting and investigating disease outbreaks, they are not designed for identifying and preventing many of the adverse health outcomes associated with extreme events. Designing and implementing effective disease prediction and preventions programs that incorporate advances in weather and climate forecasting have the potential to reduce illness, injury, and death. Critical components of an early warning system include the weather forecast, disease prediction models, and a response plan designed to pro-actively undertake activities to reduce projected adverse health outcomes. Because climate change may increase climate variability, early warning systems can both reduce current vulnerability to extreme events and increase the capacity to cope with a future that may be characterized by more frequent and more intense events.
Access provided by Autonomous University of Puebla. Download to read the full chapter text
Chapter PDF
Similar content being viewed by others
References
Bayrische Ruckversicherung (1996a) 13 months later. The January 1995 floods. Bayrische Ruckversicherung. Special Issue 17
Bayrische Ruckversicherung (1996b) The ‘Christmas floods’ in Germany 1993–1994. Bayrische Ruckversicherung. Special Issue 16
Boehmer-Christiansen S (1994) The precautionary principle in Germany: enabling government. In: O’Riordan T, Cameron J (eds) Interpreting the precautionary principle. Cameron and May, London
Bouma MJ, Dye C (1997) Cycles of malaria associated with El Niño in Venezuela. JAMA 278:1772–4
Bouma MJ, Poveda G, Rojas W, Chavasse D, Quinones M, Cox J, Patz J (1997) Predicting high-risk years for malaria in Colombia using parameters of El Niño Southern Oscillation. Tropical Medicine and International Health 2:1122–7
Bouma MJ, van der Kaay HJ (1996) El Niño Southern Oscillation and the historic malaria epidemics on the Indian subcontinent and Sri Lanka: an early warning system for future epidemics? Tropical Medicine and International Health 1:86–96
Chen D, Cane MA, Kaplan A, Zebiak SE, Huang D (2004) Predictability of El Nino over the past 148 years. Nature 428:733–736
Commission of the European Community (CEC) (2000) Communication from the Commission on the precautionary principle, Brussels
Committee of Inquiry into the Future Development of the Public Health Function (1988) Public Health in England. Cmnd 289. HMSO, London
Committee on Climate, Ecosystems, Infectious Disease, and Human Health, Board on Atmospheric Sciences and Climate, and National Research Council (2001). Under the Weather: Climate, Ecosystems, and Infectious disease. National Academies Press, Washington
Ebi KL, Teisberg TJ, Kalkstein LS, Robinson L, Weiher RF. Heat watch/warning systems save lives: estimated costs and benefits for Philadelphia 1995–1998. Bulletin of American Meteorological Society (BAMS) 2004; 85(8):1067–1073
EEA (2001) Late lessons for early warnings: the precautionary principle, 1896–2000. European Environment Agency, Copenhagen
Estrela T, Menendez M, Dimas M, Marcuello C et al. (2001) Sustainable water use in Europe. Part 3. Extreme hydrological events: floods and droughts. Environment issue report No. 21. European Environment Agency, Copenhagen
Glantz MH (2004). Usable Science 8: Early Warning Systems: Do’s and Don’ts. Report of a workshop 20–23 October 2003 in Shanghai, China. National Center for Atmospheric Research. www.esig.ucar.edu/warning
Hajat S, Ebi KL, Kovats S, Menne B, Edwards S, Haines A (2003) The human health consequences of flooding in Europe: a review. Applied Environmental Science and Public Health 1:13–21
Kalkstein LS (2003). Description of our heat/health watch-warning systems: their nature and extent, and required resources. Final report to Stratus Consulting Company, Boulder, Colorado, 31 pp
Kalkstein LS, Jamason PF, Greene JS, Libby J, Robinson L (1996) The Philadelphia Hot Weather-Health Watch/Warning System: development and application, Summer 1995. BAMS 177, 1519–1528
Kilbourne EM (1997) Heat waves and hot environments. The Public Health Consequences of Disasters, E.K. Noji, Ed., Oxford University Press, New York, 245–269
Kovats RS, Bouma M, Haines A (1999) El Niño and Health. (WHO/SDE/PHE/99.4), Geneva: WHO
Kovats RS, Ebi KL, Menne B (2003) Methods for Assessing Human Health Vulnerability and Public Health Adaptation to Climate Change. WHO/Health Canada/UNEP
Kriz B, Benes C, Castkova J, Helcl J (1998) Monitoring the epidemiological situation in flooded areas of the Czech Republic in 1997. In: Konference DDD’ 98; Kongresove Centrum Lazeoska Kolonada Podibrady, 11.–13. Kvitna 1998. Prodebrady, Czech Republic
Last JM (2001) A Dictionary of Epidemiology, 4th edn. Oxford University Press, Oxford
Last JM (1998). Public Health and Human Ecology, 2nd edn. Prentice Hall International, Inc., London, p 9
Malilay J (1997) Floods. In: Noji E (ed) Public Health Consequences of Disasters. OUP, New York, p 287–301
Miettinen IT, Zacheus O, von Bonsdorff CH, Vartiainen T (2001) Waterborne epidemics in Finland in 1998–1999. Water Sci Technol 43:67–71
Nicholls N (2002) Climatic outlooks: from revolutionary science to orthodoxy. In: Climate and Culture, Canberra, 25–27 September. Australian Academy of Science
Palecki MA, Changnon SA, Kunkel KE (2001) The nature and impacts of the July 1999 heat wave in the Midwestern United States: learning from the lessons of 1995. BAMS 82:1353–1367
Sheridan SC, Kalkstein LS (1998) Heat watch-warning systems in urban areas. World Resource Rev 10:375–383
USPCC RARM (1997). Framework for Environmental Health Risk Management, Final Report Volume 1, US Presidential/Congressional Commission on Risk Assessment and Risk Management, Washington DC
Wilson ML, Anker M (2005) Disease surveillance in the context of climate stressors: needs and opportunities. In: Ebi KL, Smith JB, Burton I. Integration of Public Health with Adaptation to Climate Change: Lessons Learned and New Directions. In press
Woodruff R (2005) Epidemic early warning systems. In: Ebi KL, Smith JB, Burton I. Integration of Public Health with Adaptation to Climate Change: Lessons Learned and New Directions. In press
World Health Organization (2004) Using Climate to Predict Infectious Disease Outbreaks: A Review. WHO/SDE/OEH/04.01. WHO, Geneva
Yach D (1996) Redefining the scope of public health beyond the year 2000. Current Issues in Public Health 2:247–252
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Editor information
Editors and Affiliations
Rights and permissions
Copyright information
© 2005 World Health Organization
About this chapter
Cite this chapter
Ebi, K.L. (2005). Improving Public Health Responses to Extreme Weather Events. In: Kirch, W., Bertollini, R., Menne, B. (eds) Extreme Weather Events and Public Health Responses. Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg. https://doi.org/10.1007/3-540-28862-7_5
Download citation
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/3-540-28862-7_5
Publisher Name: Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg
Print ISBN: 978-3-540-24417-2
Online ISBN: 978-3-540-28862-6
eBook Packages: MedicineMedicine (R0)