INVESTIGADORES
GOMEZ Andrea Alejandra
congresos y reuniones científicas
Título:
CLIMATE CHANGE AND THE RISING INCIDENCE OF DENGUE IN ARGENTINA
Autor/es:
LÓPEZ, MARÍA SOLEDAD; GOMEZ, ANDREA ALEJANDRA; MÜLLER, GABRIELA V.; WALKER, ELISABET; ROBERT, MICHAEL A.; DOMÍNGUEZ, DIANA; CERRUDO, CAROLINA; ESTALLO, ELIZABET L.
Lugar:
Buenos Aires
Reunión:
Congreso; CONGREMET 2022; 2022
Institución organizadora:
Centro Argentino de Meteorólogos - Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales, Universidad de Buenos Aires
Resumen:
Climate can affect the transmission dynamics, geographic spread, and re-emergence of vector-bornediseases (Rocklöv and Dubrow 2020). In the past few decades, many mosquito-borne diseases haveexpanded their distributions from tropical and subtropical regions to temperate areas around the world(Tomasello et al. 2013; Rey 2014; Robert et al. 2019; Robert et al. 2020; López et al. 2021). The factorsthat contribute to the global expansion and intensification of dengue virus (DENV) and otherarboviruses include global-scale travel, rapid and unplanned urbanization, and changes in climateleading to increased temperatures and erratic precipitation patterns (Gubler 2002, 2011; Hii et al. 2009;Butterworth et al. 2017; Huber et al. 2018). The Americas is one of the most severely affected regions,with the southern limit of DENV transmission located in Argentina, South America (WHO 2020).Large-scale global dengue epidemics are associated mainly with the presence of Aedes aegyptimosquitoes, which are also responsible for transmitting other emerging and re-emerging arbovirusessuch as yellow fever, Zika, and chikungunya (Lambrechts et al. 2010). In Argentina, the geographicaldistribution of Ae. aegypti is expanding. Climate conditions, especially temperature, influence theglobal spread of the vector, the species' life history characteristics, and the acceleration of the virustransmission capacity (Boggs et al. 2012; Bhatt et al. 2013; Carrington et al. 2013; Kraemer et al. 2015;Caldwell et al. 2021). In addition, heavy precipitation and associated flooding events are projected tobecome more intense and frequent in some regions of South America (e.g., Lovino et al. 2018a, 2018b).These projected changes in climate conditions are predicted to affect the distribution and competenceof Ae. aegypti and other vectors and have a potentially significant impact on the epidemiology of dengueglobally (Rocklöv and Tozan 2019).This work aims to analyze the evolution of the incidence of DENV in Argentina from its re-introductionin 1998 until the most recent and largest epidemic in 2020, and its relation to climate change. Wedescribed the trend and anomalies of temperature and precipitation across the country. Finally, weanalyzed the number of months and days with suitable temperature conditions for DENV transmissionin representative cities.