Thumbnail
Climate risk management for Malaria Control in Kenya - The case of the western Highlands
Resource ID
7c5ecab2-3d23-11e6-b1f1-040146164b01
Title
Climate risk management for Malaria Control in Kenya - The case of the western Highlands
Date
Jan. 1, 2013, 6 p.m., Publication
Abstract
Kenya experiences a number of development challenges, such as environmental degradation, high poverty (particularly in rural areas), economic inequality, and limited access to critical services like water and health care. Malaria continues to be the number- one cause of disease and mortality. Although prevalence is low in most parts of the country, the disease is re-emerging in the western highlands due to a combination of climate and non-climate factors. The combination of unusually high temperatures, rainfall and humidity encourages malaria epidemics. Kenya is highly prone to climate hazards, in particular droughts and localized oods, which have considerable e ects on the economy (up to 2 percent of GDP per year), but uncertainty remains regarding changes in frequency and severity of extreme climate events. Higher temperatures are expected in the future, with some regional di erences. But greater uncertainties are associated with future rainfall projections. This study was conducted to assess climate risks on malaria control in the western Kenyan highlands and to identify climate risk management options.
Edition
--
Responsible
andy
Point of Contact
Fraser
sfraser@worldbank.org
Purpose
--
Maintenance Frequency
None
Type
not filled
Restrictions
None
License
None
Language
eng
Temporal Extent
Start
--
End
--
Supplemental Information
drought, climate_change
Data Quality
--
Extent
  • x0:
  • x1:
  • y0:
  • y1:
Spatial Reference System Identifier
EPSG:4326
Keywords
(10525, 109, 839, 48, 109, 'Kenya', 'kenya'), (10524, 368, 839, 48, 368, 'Climate Risk Management', 'climate-risk-management'), (10526, 391, 839, 48, 391, 'Malaria', 'malaria')
Category
Climatology Meteorology Atmosphere
Regions
Kenya