Title: CLIMATE CHANGE AND PUBLIC HEALTH ADAPTATION IN INDONESIA
1- CLIMATE CHANGE AND PUBLIC HEALTH ADAPTATION IN
INDONESIA - Budi Haryanto
- Department of Environmental Health
- Faculty of Public Health University of
Indonesia - The Nautilus Institute Workshop on Mapping Causal
Complexity - in Climate Change Impacts and Adaptation,
- Melbourne, 21-22 November 2008
2INTRODUCTION
- Climatic changes have already affected numerous
damaging impacts on human health. - Spreading infectious disease, longer and hotter
heat waves, and extreme weather claim thousands
of additional lives nationwide each year. - Warming climate is creating the ideal conditions
for spread of infectious disease, putting
millions of people at risk. - Climate change has lead to increase the outbreaks
and spread of Dengue Hemorrhagic Fever (DHF),
malaria, cholera, encephalitis, hantavirus, and
other diseases all over the world. - Ironically, the countries which have less
contributed to the global warming are highly
susceptible and more outbreaks of diseases and
deaths due to global warming impact
3OUTLINE PRESENTATION
- Introduction
- Climate change and health impacts
- Research in Indonesia
- Public health adaptation
- Strategic idea for public health adaptation in
Indonesia
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6EXTREME EVENTS HEALTH IMPACTS (DoH, WA)
7Potential health impacts of gradual climatic
changes
8Potential health impacts of gradual climatic
changes
9Potential health impacts of gradual climatic
changes
10Potential health impacts of gradual climatic
changes
11Trend of Temperature and DHF Cases in Indonesia
1968-Sept 2007
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13Dengues principal vector Aedes aegypti
Principal vector is female Aedes aegypti
mosquito. Infected mosquito remains infective for
life. Indonesia reported dengue cases doubled in
2007 vs. 2005.
14Malaria Cases
15Malaria Endemic Areas
16 Effects of Temperature Rise on Dengue
Transmission
- Shorten viral incubation period in mosquito
- Shorten breeding cycle of mosquito
- Increase frequency of mosquito feeding
- More efficient transmission of dengue virus from
mosquito to human
17IMPACTS CLIMATE CHANGE ON HUMAN HEALTH IN
INDONESIA
- Direct effects
- Increasing of injuries associated with extreme
weather events - Indirect effects
- Increasing of vector borne diseases (malaria,
dengue, filariasis) associated with increasing of
temperature, rainfall, humidity, and vector
density. - Increasing of water borne diseases (diarrhea,
cholera, typhoid, leptospirosis) associated with
decreasing of water quality and water supply as
well as floods and droughts.
18- Indirect effects
- Increasing of malnutrition cases is related to
food production and land use shifts - Increasing of cardio cerebral vascular diseases,
hypertension, and mental disorders are associated
with urban stress, life style, displacements and
conflicts. - Increasing of influenza (ARI) and respiratory
diseases (asthma, pneumonia) are associated with
increasing of air pollution outdoor as well as
indoor - Increasing of food borne diseases is associated
with contamination, food handling, and poverty.
19MAIN CONCERN SPREADING OF DISEASES
- Unique transmission pathways
- Specific for every single disease outcome
- Once the impact occurred, the disease will spread
from infected person to others and from the new
infected people to broader population as snow
ball phenomenon - The spread of disease may not be controlled
directly even by manipulating or modifying the
environment - Analysis of each of these steps allows a logical
determination of vulnerability and subsequent
development of adaptive measures that aim to
decrease vulnerability - It will need specific discipline of technology,
method, and expert such as public
health/environmental health, medical, and
pharmacy to deal with the impacts.
20CURRENT RESEARCH REVIEWS
- Rainfall and rain date in Jakarta associated with
Incidence Rate and Case Fatality Rate of Dengue
Infection in 2002-2006 by Nainggolan L et al., UI
07. - Aedes aegypti density in Jakarta associated with
climate change by Sungkar S et al., UI 07. - The influence of climate change to the spreading
of dengue virus serotypes and the increasing of
cases in Jakarta by Adriansjah et al., UI 07. - Pulmonary tuberculosis and climate change in
Indonesia by Burhan E et al., UI 07. - The incidence of leptospirosis and its risk
factors in Jakarta by Nainggolan L et al., UI
07. - Mental health of adolescents associated with
climate change by Ismail RI et al., UI 07. - Increasing morbidity and mortality caused by air
pollution associated with climate change in City
of Bandung 2002-2006 by Soemirat J Dirgawati
M, ITB 07. - Occupational dermatosis incident associated with
climate change in Surabaya by Martiana T et al.,
Unair 07. - Lung disorders associated with climate change in
Jakarta by Andarini S et al., UI 07.
21Research
- Lung cancer associated with climate change in
Jakarta by Syahruddin E et al., UI 07. - Predicting the increasing of malaria cases in
endemic area caused by climate change 2002-2003
by Yudhastuti R et al., Unair 07. - Approach and method of studies on health and
infectious diseases-related to climate change by
Haryanto B, UI 07. - Early warning system for malaria outbreak by
Subirosa BS et al., UI 07. - The pattern of malaria distribution as impact of
climate change in Pacitan regency 1998-2002 by
Chatarina UW et al., Unair 07. - Global warming ad public health impact in
Indonesia by Sutomo S, UI 07. - Climate change and DHF in Tanah Laut District of
South Kalimantan Province 2001-2006 by Basuki H
et al, Unair 07. - Climate change and voice of public health
association in Indonesia by Indonesian Public
Health Association 2007.
22Health impact assessment
- to evaluate the impact of climate variability and
change in a range of areas and populations - to evaluate possible threshold effects
- to evaluate the effects of multiple stresses,
including changes in socioeconomic systems - to evaluate uncertainty and its implications for
risk management - to evaluate the effects of reducing emissions,
such as by comparing impact under scenarios with
business-as-usual and stabilization of emissions
and - to measure coping capacity, especially under
different socioeconomic futures and in the
context of sustainable development.
23PUBLIC HEALTH RESPONSE AND ADAPTATION IN INDONESIA
- Infectious disease surveillance
- Health action in emergencies
- Safe drinking water
- Integrated vector management
- Environmental health capacity building
- Healthy public policy (healthy housing, school,
forest, industry, city)
24WHO Adaptation Focus
- Health security
- Strengthening health systems
- Health development
- Evidence and information
- Delivery
- Partnership
25PUBLIC HEALTH ADAPTATION IDEAS IN INDONESIA
- Empowering ecological-diseases surveillance
system and developing public health early warning
system - Development response to disaster effects of
climate change - Enhancing capacity building for government,
private sector, and civil society on managing
prevention and control climate change on human
health - Increasing political awareness on climate change
human health - Empowering public health services system for
disease prevention and control - Generating research and method on epidemiology
and medicine to find out the approach in breaking
the disease transmission chains - Preventing and eradicating climate change
vector-related diseases
26Impacts, Vulnerability, Adaptations
Characteristics of exposed group (location,
wealth, resources, health status, culture, etc.)
Adaptations
Vulnerability of group
Learning
Actions in response to impact
Health Impact
Exposure
Mitigation Reduced exposure
BREAKING TRANSMISSION CHAINS
27THANK YOU