Disease Risk Predicted by New Climate Change Adaptation Tool
date:Apr 21, 2014
s of waterborne disease, and higher temperatures can influence disease incidence by either encouraging or restricting pathogen reproduction, depending on the species.

Concerns have therefore been raised about the impacts of climate change on public health.

In response to a World Health Organization call for new decision-support tools to assess climate changes potential health impacts, the authors of this EU-funded study,A Decision Support Tool to Compare Waterborne and Foodborne Infection and/
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