Climate change and infectious diseases
Summary
Climate change will alter the distribution and burden of infectious diseases. Anticipating future impacts requires characterizing how climate drivers alter transmission of vector-borne, waterborne and respiratory pathogens, accounting for nonlinear relationships between climate variables and disease outcomes. Here we show how inference from laboratory and observational studies in the present can be used to develop projections for the future impact of climate change on infectious disease, a
Content
# Climate change and infectious diseases
*Published: 2026 May*
Climate change will alter the distribution and burden of infectious diseases.
Anticipating future impacts requires characterizing how climate drivers alter
transmission of vector-borne, waterborne and respiratory pathogens, accounting
for nonlinear relationships between climate variables and disease outcomes. Here
we show how inference from laboratory and observational studies in the present
can be used to develop projections for the future impact of climate change on
infectious disease, and to understand how climate change to date may have
impacted existing disease trajectories. We synthesize data from multiple
pathogens to show the broad implications of climate change for spatial and
temporal outbreak patterns and predictability. One of the most immediate
consequences of climate change may be to exacerbate the impact of weather
extremes and climate variability, requiring novel data streams and modeling
tools to tune interventions. At the same time, climate change is set to occur
against the backdrop of demographic change; therefore, determining global shifts
in vulnerability, both in the present and the future, is an important task for
public health.
DOI: 10.1038/s41591-026-04377-8