A
mysterious kidney disease that has killed thousands of sugarcane
workers and other tropical laborers is a sign of the growing public
health threat posed by climate change, warns a new
article
in the New England Journal of Medicine.
Chronic
kidney disease of undetermined causes (CKDu) is now the second
leading cause of death in both Nicaragua and El Salvador, afflicting
mostly working-age men who labor in hot, humid conditions. Scientists
are still studying the disease’s causes, but a growing body of
evidence points to heat stress and dehydration as key factors in its
development.
“Heat
stress is what is pushing this epidemic over the threshold,” said
Dr. Cecilia Sorensen, a researcher at the University of Colorado
School of Medicine and lead author of the New England Journal of
Medicine article.
While
CKDu’s correlation with temperature and climate conditions may be
unusually strong, it is one of numerous maladies that occur more
frequently during times of extreme heat. Heart attacks and other
cardiovascular ailments, adverse birth outcomes and mental health
problems have all been shown to happen more often during heat waves,
said Sorensen, the author of the New England Journal of Medicine
article.
She
describes CKDu as a “sentinel disease” for a future shaped by
climate change, and urges health professionals and health agencies to
begin planning not only for more CKDu but for the broader public
health consequences of extreme heat.
“The
fact that all these things are emerging suggests that things are
going to get worse before they get better,” Johnson said.
The
emergence of CKDu as an international public health threat was first
reported by the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists
in its 2011 Island
of the Widows
investigation. The project found that the disease was devastating
farmworkers along a stretch of Central America’s Pacific Coast that
spans six countries and nearly 700 miles, while wealthy nations
imported high quantities of sugar from the region and resisted pleas
to fund research into the ailment.
A
2012
investigation
by the Center for Public Integrity examined a similar malady
affecting farmworkers in Sri Lanka and India, widely believed to be
part of the same lethal phenomenon.
Yet
the evidence does not explain why CKDu occurs among some laborers in
hot, tropical areas and not others, leading many scientists to
believe that exposure to a toxin, such as a pesticide or heavy metal,
may also be contributing to the disease.
In
addition, researchers believe that they are finding CKDu in a growing
number of countries beyond Central America and South Asia. Data on
these cases is sparse, but reports
indicate
that CKDu may be afflicting workers in Mexico, Egypt, Sudan and even
in the United States among farmworkers in California and Texas.
Leading
CKDu researcher Dr. Richard Johnsonsays the common factor among the
affected areas is extreme heat and humidity. Johnson says that even
more than rising temperatures, the intense heatwaves associated with
climate change place workers at risk when they occur.
“The
epidemic seems to rise in correlation with heatwaves and higher
temperatures,” Johnson said.
https://www.icij.org/investigations/island-widows/deadly-kidney-disease-linked-to-climate-change-in-new-report/
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