FAO AGRIS - International System for Agricultural Science and Technology

The Health Impact of Extreme Weather Events in Sub-Saharan Africa

2009

Wang, Limin | Kanji, Shireen | Bandyopadhyay, Sushenjit


Bibliographic information
Other Subjects
Cultural change; Climatic regions; Grid; Heat waves; Monsoon; National level; Rapid population growth; Tropical medicine; Child survival; Journal of epidemiology; Malaria epidemics; Policy research; Hookworm infection; Trachoma; Global climate change; Dengue fever; Dangers; Household level; Human biology; Child mortality; Climate effects; Female education; Gdp; Progress; Socioeconomic variables; Child death; Infant mortality rates; Diarrheal diseases; Child deaths; Morbidity and mortality; Access to health services; Illness; Climate changes; Vicious cycle; Health outcomes; Sanitation facilities; Infant mortality; Population growth rate; Reproductive age; Negotiations; Child mortality rates; Poor households; Impact on health; Dengue; Victims; Early childhood; Access to health care; Treatment; Burden of disease; Health burden; Arid zone; Health impact; Environmental health; Intergovernmental panel on climate change; Diarrhea cases; Local population; Antenatal care; Young children; Climate variables; Greenhouse gas; Number of people; Hookworm; Std; Floods; Climate variation; Access to treatment; Vulnerable groups; Environmental change; Ambient temperature; Woman; Climate zones; Dracunculiasis; Health indicators; Early years; Nature of health; Health effects; Water contamination; Disability; Clinics; Ipcc; Policy makers; Policy research working paper; Public health policy; Purchasing power; Weather patterns; Safe water; Latrines; Precipitation events; Health interventions; International journal of epidemiology; Malaria transmission; Purchasing power parity; Social science; Socioeconomic factors; Population division; Weather variability; Safety nets; Population projections; Healthy life; Population age structure; Population studies; Rainforest; Health consequences; Waterborne disease; Disease outbreak; World population; Mortality decline; Socioeconomic status; Cases of diarrhea; Health policy; Implications for health; Mortality rate; Malnutrition among children; Social affairs; Prevalence
License
Policy Research working paper ; no. WPS 4979http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/us/World BankCreative Commons Attribution CC BY 3.0
Source
Policy Research working paper ; no. WPS 4979

2014-09-15
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