Dreadful infectious disease outbreaks threaten flood-ravaged pakistan: short communication

Author:

Shaikh Omer Ahmed1ORCID,Rahim Maliha2,Essarani Manisha1,Nadeem Soeba1,Ochani Sidhant3ORCID,Hasibuzzaman Md. Al4,Ullah Kaleem5

Affiliation:

1. Department of Medicine, Ziauddin University

2. Department of Medicine, Jinnah Sindh Medical University, Karachi

3. Department of Medicine, Khairpur Medical College, Khairpur Mir’s

4. Institute of Nutrition and Food Sciences, University of Dhaka, Dhaka, Bangladesh

5. Department of Liver Transplantation, Pir Abdul Qadir Shah Jeelani Institute of Medical Sciences, Gambat, Pakistan

Abstract

A rise in the incidence of water-borne, communicable illnesses, and viral outbreaks in Pakistan follows periods of heavy rainfall. Due to climate change, floods and droughts have had devastating effects on human health by facilitating the spread of infectious illnesses including cholera, malaria, typhoid, dengue fever, and viral hepatitis A. Food instability, starvation, malnutrition, and a lack of potable water are only some of the indirect effects of flooding on health. Recently, one of the worst floods in history devastated Pakistan, affecting more than 333 million people along with a significant portion of the nation submerged. Malaria, dengue fever, and other ailments are on the rise in Pakistan, threatening to overwhelm the country’s healthcare infrastructure. There is an urgent need for preventative measures in Pakistan to cope with dreadful outbreaks.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

General Medicine,Surgery

Reference7 articles.

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3. Effect of recent floods on women’s reproductive health in Pakistan: an alarming situation;Ochani;Int J Surg Glob Health,2023

4. Mapping vulnerability to climate change and its repercussions on human health in Pakistan;Malik;Glob Health,2012

5. The ongoing surge of dengue amidst a multidemic era in Pakistan;Ochani;Int J Surg Glob Health,2023

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