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Global consumption and international trade in deforestation-associated commodities could influence malaria risk

Deforestation can increase the transmission of malaria. Here, we build upon the existing link between malaria risk and deforestation by investigating how the global demand for commodities that increase deforestation can also increase malaria risk. We use a database of trade relationships to link the...

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Published in:Nature communications 2020-03, Vol.11 (1), p.1258-10, Article 1258
Main Authors: Chaves, Leonardo Suveges Moreira, Fry, Jacob, Malik, Arunima, Geschke, Arne, Sallum, Maria Anice Mureb, Lenzen, Manfred
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description Deforestation can increase the transmission of malaria. Here, we build upon the existing link between malaria risk and deforestation by investigating how the global demand for commodities that increase deforestation can also increase malaria risk. We use a database of trade relationships to link the consumption of deforestation-implicated commodities in developed countries to estimates of country-level malaria risk in developing countries. We estimate that about 20% of the malaria risk in deforestation hotspots is driven by the international trade of deforestation-implicated export commodities, such as timber, wood products, tobacco, cocoa, coffee and cotton. By linking malaria risk to final consumers of commodities, we contribute information to support demand-side policy measures to complement existing malaria control interventions, with co-benefits for reducing deforestation and forest disturbance. Because many primary commodities cause deforestation and deforestation can increase malaria transmission, international trade can thus indirectly influence malaria risk. Here the authors use trade databases for commodites associated with deforestation to demonstrate that consumption of such commodities in developed nations could increase malaria risk in developing nations.
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subjects 631/158/1469
631/158/843
692/499
Agriculture - statistics & numerical data
Agriculture - trends
Cocoa
Coffee
Commerce
Commodities
Conservation of Natural Resources - statistics & numerical data
Conservation of Natural Resources - trends
Consumption
Cotton
Deforestation
Developed countries
Developing countries
Disease hot spots
Disease transmission
Ecology
Economics
Environmental Monitoring
Forest management
Forests
Geography
Health risks
Humanities and Social Sciences
Humans
International trade
Internationality
LDCs
Malaria
Malaria - epidemiology
Malaria - transmission
Models, Theoretical
multidisciplinary
Policy
Risk
Risk Factors
Science
Science (multidisciplinary)
Timber
Tobacco
Trees
Vector-borne diseases
Wood
Wood products
title Global consumption and international trade in deforestation-associated commodities could influence malaria risk
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