Climate Change as a Public Health Emergency in India

Context:
β€’ Climate change is increasingly being recognised as a major public health emergency, with wide-ranging impacts on disease patterns, air quality, and food security in India.

Key Highlights:

  • Disease Burden & Health Risks
    β€’ Rise in waterborne diseases (cholera, typhoid) due to urban flooding and waterlogging
    β€’ Expansion of vector-borne diseases (dengue, malaria) into new regions like Himachal Pradesh
    β€’ Increased disease duration and transmission cycles due to changing climate patterns
  • Air Pollution & Heat Stress
    β€’ Higher PM2.5 levels leading to respiratory and cardiovascular diseases
    β€’ Increased air conditioning usage worsening pollution levels
    β€’ Rising night-time temperatures causing heat stress and reduced recovery time
  • Water & Food Security Impacts
    β€’ Water scarcity forcing reliance on unsafe water β†’ diarrheal diseases
    β€’ Disruption of agriculture and crop cycles
    β€’ Decline in nutritional quality of food β†’ micronutrient deficiencies
  • Vulnerable Populations
    β€’ Children, elderly, and urban poor most affected
    β€’ Communities with weak healthcare infrastructure face higher risks
  • Significance
    β€’ Links environmental degradation with human health outcomes
    β€’ Highlights need for climate-resilient healthcare systems

Relevant Prelims Points:
β€’ PM2.5: Fine particulate matter (<2.5 microns) causing deep lung penetration
β€’ Vector-borne Diseases: Diseases transmitted by vectors like mosquitoes (e.g., dengue, malaria)
β€’ Heatwave: Period of abnormally high temperatures (IMD criteria)
β€’ Micronutrient Deficiency: Lack of essential vitamins and minerals (e.g., iron, iodine)
β€’ Urban Heat Island Effect: Higher temperatures in cities due to built environment

Relevant Mains Points:

  • Health Impacts of Climate Change
  • Increased disease burden and healthcare costs
  • Emergence of new disease patterns
  • Pressure on public health infrastructure
  • Interlinkages with Development
  • Climate impacts on water, sanitation, and nutrition
  • Links with SDG 3 (Health), SDG 6 (Water), SDG 13 (Climate Action)
  • Challenges
  • Lack of climate-health integration in policy
  • Weak surveillance systems for emerging diseases
  • Inequitable access to healthcare
  • Way Forward
  • Integrate climate resilience into public health planning
  • Strengthen early warning systems for diseases and heatwaves
  • Promote sustainable urban planning and pollution control
  • Improve nutrition and food security systems

UPSC Relevance:
β€’ GS Paper III – Environment, Climate Change, Health
β€’ GS Paper II – Public Health

« Prev November 2025 Next »
SunMonTueWedThuFriSat
1
2345678
9101112131415
16171819202122
23242526272829
30