Geographic Factors Contributing to Diffusion
Geographic Factors Contributing to Diffusion
- Diffusion of disease is its spread from place to place
- The disease incidence rate is the number of new disease cases over a specific period, in relation to the overall population of an area
- Geographic factors are physical and human characteristics that affect incidence and diffusion rates
- Vector-borne disease transmits to humans from another vector e.g. animals like mosquitos or tics
- These include diseases such as dengue fever, malaria and Lyme disease
- Water-borne diseases result from poor sanitation, hygiene and the consumption of unsafe water
- They include cholera, typhoid, diarrhoea and dysentery
- Vector-borne disease transmits to humans from another vector e.g. animals like mosquitos or tics
Physical
- Warmer climates, like tropical latitudes, make it easier for vector-borne diseases to spread
- Mosquitos thrive in warm and humid environments
- Climate change is likely to worsen this, as vectors may spread to areas such as southern Europe
- Heavy rainfall can cause flooding, leaving behind large areas of stagnant water
- Vectors thrive in these stagnant water bodies e.g. mosquitos
- For example, water may stand near populated areas or in irrigation channels
- Natural disasters could increase dirty water
- Flood or tsunami waters may contain sewage
- Earthquakes or hurricanes can damage sewage systems, allowing sewage to enter drinking water sources
- Rich biodiversity causes dilution of vector-borne diseases
- With human-induced climate change, biodiversity will decrease
- This will increase disease spread
Economic/political
- Less developed countries have poor sanitation and hygiene, which increases the risk of water-borne diseases
- Education rates are also lower, with little knowledge about hygiene and disease spread
- Less developed countries also have poorer quality healthcare, e.g vaccines
- War and conflict can result in higher disease incidence:
- Destruction of healthcare infrastructure, like hospitals
- Damage to sewage pipelines, resulting in contaminated water
- Debris contamination in stagnant water
- Industry development may also cause diffusion:
- Logging within tropical rainforests increases temperatures in the area
- Heavy rainfall causes flooding of the cleared/deforested land or increases
- Water collects in mining pits, irrigation channels and rice paddy fields, where vectors breed more efficiently
- Agriculture (e.g. livestock) can provide food for vectors, increasing their population
- Logging within tropical rainforests increases temperatures in the area
Social and cultural
- Migrants or settlers may move to an area that already has high immunity and contract vector-borne diseases
- Urbanisation causes increased unregulated development in areas where vectors thrive or where other non-human disease hosts exist
- Globalisation has meant that new non-indigenous vectors can move around the world