COVID-19 pandemic lessons: recipe for uncertainty research on
climate-sensitive diseases
Abstract
Lessons from the strong global response to the coronavirus disease 2019
(COVID-19) pandemic and a renewed call for “One health” approach to
health systems management in “The Lancet” parallel climate change
emergencies. The weakened health - climate change nexus, perceived
largely within public health need to engage how the Earth system (i.e.
relationships between air, land, life and water on earth) in shaping the
etiologies, incidences and transmission dynamics of diseases. The
question “What are the drivers of the drivers of diseases?” using the
context of diarrheal diseases is posed. Subsequently, we need to
understand how (i) climatic risks drive biological health hazards, (ii)
shifts in disease control services of ecosystems regulate diseases,
(iii) climate change within Earth systems modify disease pathogens and
species hosts relationships. Hence, safeguarding Earth system-related
disease dynamics would inform pluralistic approaches beyond “One
health”.