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Fact sheet N°192
Revised March 2000
El Niño and its health impact
Every few years, an unusually warm current flows off the western coast
of South America. Its appearance after Christmas lead sailors in Peru to christen it El
Niño, the Christ-child in Spanish.
Like a child, it is sometimes unpredictable, and sometimes creates
havoc. In El Niño's case, it brings natural disasters such as storms, floods and
droughts and famine in far-flung parts of the world.
The term El Niño is nowadays used to refer to the periods of strong
and prolonged warm weather, which influence the climate worldwide. The periods of the warm
waters in eastern Pacific (El Niño) and periods of cooler waters (La Niña) are
accompanied by changes of air pressure in the east and west Pacific: these are called the
Southern Oscillation. The whole cycle is now referred to as El Niño Southern Oscillation
(ENSO). The effects of La Niña are generally less pronounced and tend to be the opposite
of those of El Niño.
- El Niño events occur irregularly, about every 2-7 years.
- They last from 12 to 18 months.
- The El Niño event begins with the weakening of the prevailing winds in the Pacific and a shift in rainfall patterns.
- The events are associated with extreme weather (floods and drought) in countries surrounding the Pacific and much further afield.
- Prolonged dry periods may occur in South-east Asia, Southern Africa and Northern Australia and heavy rainfall, sometimes with flooding, in Peru and Ecuador.
- During a typical El Niño, the Asian monsoon usually weakens and is pushed towards equator, often bringing summer drought to north-west and central regions of India and heavy rainfall in the north-east.
- The regions where El Niño has a strong effect on climate are those with the least resources : southern Africa, parts of South America, South-east Asia.
Health impact and natural disasters
The number of people killed, injured or made homeless by natural
disasters is increasing alarmingly. This is partly due to population growth and the
concentration of population in high-risk areas like coastal zones and cities. Their
vulnerability to extreme weather conditions is also increasing. For example:
- Large shanty towns with flimsy habitations are often located on land subject to frequent flooding.
- In many areas the only places available to poor communities may be marginal land with few natural defences against weather extremes.
Large yearto-year fluctuations of natural disasters, some of
which can be explained by El Niño, are described as the El Niño disaster cycle.
- The risk of a natural disaster is highest in the years during and after the appearance of El Niño and lowest in the years before.
- El Niño events 1982-83 and 1997-98, the most recent, were the largest this century.
- El Niño is associated with death and disease, most of which result from weather-related disasters such as floods and droughts.
- In 1997 Central Ecuador and Peru suffered rainfall more than 10 times normal, which caused flooding, extensive erosion and mudslides with loss of lives, destruction of homes and food supplies.
- In the same year nearly 10% of all health facilities in Peru were damaged.
- The 1991-92 El Niño brought the worst drought in southern Africa this century, which affected nearly 100 million people.
- Ecuador, Peru and Bolivia suffered serious malaria epidemics after heavy rainfall in 1983 El Niño. The epidemic in Ecuador was badly exacerbated by displacement of population owing to the flooding.
- The most expensive natural disaster ever, Hurricane Andrew, happened during the same 1991-92 El Niño although El Niño usually reduces hurricane activity.
- During the 1997 El Niño droughts hit Malaysia, Indonesia and Brazil, exacerbating the huge forest fires. Smoke inhalation from these fires was a major public health problem in these countries, with countless people visiting health facilities with respiratory problems.
Recently, there has been growing recognition of the links between El
Niño and disease. For example, doctors for many years were intrigued by the cycles of
malaria in some countries roughly every 5 years. Such cycles in India, Venezuela and
Columbia have now been linked to El Niño. Pronounced changes in the incidence of epidemic
diseases can occur in parallel with extreme weather conditions associated with the El
Niño cycle.
El Niño and epidemic diseases
The El Niño cycle is associated with increased risks of some of the
diseases transmitted by mosquitoes, such as malaria, dengue and Rift Valley fever. Malaria
transmission is particularly sensitive to weather conditions. In dry climates, heavy
rainfall can create puddles, that provide good breeding conditions for mosquitoes. In very
humid climates, droughts may turn rivers into strings of pools, preferred breeding sites
of other types of mosquito .
Generalizations about the association between vector-borne disease
transmission and El Niño are not easy, as local transmission depends on ecology of the
local vector species, whose responses to timing and amount of rainfall may differ.
Malaria
- Malaria is increasing and resurgent in areas where it had formerly been controlled.
On the desert and highland fringes of malarious areas, rainfall,
humidity and temperature are critical parameters for disease transmission. In these places
malaria transmission is unstable and the population lacks protective immunity. Thus, when
weather conditions favour transmission, serious epidemics may occur.
In some highland regions higher temperatures possibly linked to El
Niño may increase malaria transmission. This has been shown to occur in higher latitude
parts of Asia, such as northern Pakistan. At the beginning of this century, periodic
epidemics of malaria flared up in Punjab region (north-east Pakistan and north-west India)
after excessive monsoon rainfall.
Before the advent of DDT for malaria control, the risk of malaria in
Punjab increased five times following an El Niño.
From 1921, forecasts of malaria epidemics in that region were based on
established relationship between rainfall and malaria mortality, creating probably the
first malaria early warning system. Malaria is now controlled in Punjab, but it is still a
serious problem in more arid areas in Western Rajasthan and Gujarat in India and Pakistan.
There, too, the epidemics are linked to excessive rainfall. However, in some regions,
malaria epidemics are linked to below-average rainfall.
- In Venezuela and Colombia, malaria cases increase by more than one third following dry conditions associated with El Niño.
- In Sri Lanka, in pre-DDT times, the risk of malaria increased three-fold following the failure of the monsoon which was also associated with El Niño.
- In Southern Africa, countries have recently experienced malaria epidemics following unusual rainfall.
Dengue
Dengue is the most important viral tropical disease transmitted by
mosquitoes.
The mosquitoes that transmit dengue breed in containers and are less
sensitive to rainfall patterns, but higher temperatures associated with El Niño may have
an effect on the transmission of the virus. The connection between the weather conditions
and dengue transmission and outbreaks is not yet clear; even if the weather
conditions were favourable for transmission, the local population may be already immune to
the prevalent virus.
Preliminary studies have shown a link between the El Niño Southern
Oscillation and incidence of dengue in countries where the El Niño Southern Oscillation
has a strong effect on the weather (e.g. some Pacific Island nations and Indonesia). In
1998, many countries in Asia suffered an unusually high level of dengue and dengue
haemorrhagic fever, some of which may be attributable to El Niño-related extreme weather.
Australian encephalitis
Outbreaks of Australian Encephalitis (Murray Valley Encephalitis -
MVE), another mosquito-transmitted disease, occur in temperate south-east Australia after
heavy rainfall and flooding associated with La Niña events. There is some evidence that
outbreaks of Ross River virus infection are linked with La Niña also, but this is less
certain that in the case of MVE. The public health impact of Ross River infection is
greater than MVE in terms of number of people affected.
Rift Valley fever
Rift Valley Fever (RVF) is a mosquito transmitted viral disease,
which primarily affects cattle, but can spread to the local human population. Outbreaks of
human disease in eastern Africa always follow episodes of heavy rain (although in that
region, El Niño is not always associated with heavy rainfall). A severe outbreak of
disease occurred following excessive rainfall in north-eastern Kenya and southern Somalia
during the 1997-98 El Niño. The rainfall patterns were unusually heavy for El Niño,
resulting in flooding and major outbreaks of malaria and cholera.
El Niño forcasts
A focus of research is centred on the ability to predict El Niño
events several months in advance. Seasonal forecasts (also called El Niño forecasts) are
used to predict major climate trends for anything from several months to a few seasons
ahead. A seasonal forecast usually describes the probability of weather factors
(temperature, rainfall) being above, near or below the average. Such forecasts are much
more reliable during El Niño, because of its strong effect on climate. These forecasts
are only experimental at the moment, but their accuracy and reliability is expected to
improve in the near future.
Because El Niño events evolve over several months, it is already
possible to give advanced warning of many impacts once the onset of an event has been
confirmed.
El Niño and global warming
Global warming is one of the most serious threats to our
environment. Although we do not know how climate change may affect El Niño, it has been
suggested that the phenomenon may become more intense or more frequent.
A report by a WHO Task Group has warned that climatic change may have
important impact on human health. It is likely that the frequency and intensity of weather
events around the world will be affected.
The El Niño Southern Oscillation phenomenon provides good
opportunities to study effects of climate variability on human health.
WHO response
WHO is a member of the United Nations Inter-Agency Task Force on El
Niño. The Task Force aims to develop strategy towards prevention, preparedness and
mitigation of El Niño-induced disasters. In order to reduce the impact of the next El
Niño, the United Nations has asked for intergovernmental agencies support in activities
of the International Decade for Natural Disaster Reduction and for its successor
arrangement, the International Strategy for Disaster Reduction.
Seasonal forecasting is increasingly used to provide early warning of
drought. There is a need for collaboration between meteorological and health sectors to
produce health early warning systems.
A pilot study on the application of seasonal forecasting to malaria
control has been undertaken in the Southern Africa Development Community region. In this
study, the national meteorological services, health sector and agriculture sector have
joined forces.
WHO has recently launched a new initiative to combat malaria-"Roll Back
Malaria". Targeting control efforts to years when there is a high-risk of El Niño
increases the cost effectiveness of malaria control; also, the judicious use of
insecticides can delay the development of resistance.
For more information contact:
WHO Media centre
Telephone: +41 22 791 2222
E-mail: mediainquiries@who.int
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