Skip to main content
Advertisement
  • Loading metrics

Global urbanization and the neglected tropical diseases

  • Peter J. Hotez

    hotez@bcm.edu

    Affiliations Sabin Vaccine Institute and Texas Children’s Hospital Center for Vaccine Development, Departments of Pediatrics and Molecular Virology and Microbiology, National School of Tropical Medicine, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas, United States of America, James A Baker III Institute for Public Policy, Rice University, Houston, Texas, United States of America, Department of Biology, Baylor University, Waco, Texas, United States of America, Scowcroft Institute of International Affairs, Bush School of Government and Public Service, Texas A&M University, College Station, Texas, United States of America

Increasing urbanization in both developing and developed countries could promote the emergence of a new set of neglected tropical diseases (NTDs)

In 2014, the United Nations (UN) launched an important report on global trends in urbanization [1]. The study found that beginning in 2007, for the first time in human history, more people live in urban than rural areas, with estimates that by 2050 approximately two-thirds of the world’s population will be urbanized [1, 2]. As shown in Fig 1, the Western Hemisphere (especially North America) exhibits the highest percentage of urban dwellers, in addition to Australia and selected other areas, but the UN report also predicts some important trends in Africa and Asia.

thumbnail
Fig 1. Global urbanization map showing the percentage of urbanization by country in 2006.

Public domain image available here: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Urbanized_population_2006.png.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0005308.g001

For example, it was found that much of the future increase in urban populations will happen in Asia and Africa, where by the year 2050, 64% (up from 48% in 2014) and 56% (up from 40% in 2014) will be urbanized, respectively [1]. China, India, and Nigeria will comprise almost 40% of the future expansion in urban populations from now until 2050 [1]. During this period, new “megacities”—cities with populations that exceed 10 million people—will be formed. Most of the new megacities will be found in Asia, Africa, and Latin America where NTDs are highly endemic [1], including Mumbai, Delhi, and Kolkata (India), Dhaka (Bangladesh), Kinshasa (Democratic Republic of Congo), Lagos (Nigeria), Luanda (Angola), Dar es Salaam (Tanzania), Bogota (Colombia), and Lima (Peru) [1]. By 2030, the UN estimates that there will be 41 such megacities globally [1].

We can predict that urbanization will produce both positive and negative effects on the urban populations in the Global South. On the positive side, urbanization is often linked to culture, commerce and economic productivity, greater life expectancy, higher levels of education and literacy, increased access to social services, better access to health care, and an overall higher quality of life [1]. At the same time, rapid urbanization can also fail to sustain healthy populations when it outstrips clean water reserve and sewage management systems or when urban poverty produces unhealthy diets and diminished physical activity, low-quality housing, and environmental degradation, together with exposure to air, noise, and other forms of pollution [13]. Crowding can also be an important factor. Through such mechanisms, the effects can be devastating in terms of disease transmission and even thwart Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).

In recognition of these factors, in 2010, WHO chose urbanization as its theme for World Health Day [2]. Rapid global urbanization over the next few decades has potentially important implications for the rise of NTDs, as well as NTD and noncommunicable disease (NCD) comorbidities. While an important feature of NTDs is their disproportionate impact on populations living in rural poverty, there are selected diseases that primarily affect the poor in urban settings (Box 1) [4]. Described below are some of the major NTDs emerging in urban environments over the last three years.

Box 1. High prevalence and incidence NTDs emerging in urban environments

  • Arbovirus infections transmitted by Aedes aegypti
    • Dengue
    • Chikungunya
    • Zika virus infection
  • Canine rabies
  • Leptospirosis, cholera, and typhoid fever
  • Schistosomiasis and soil-transmitted helminthiases
  • Chagas disease and leishmaniasis
  • Intestinal protozoan infections

Neglected virus infections: Arboviruses and rabies

Aedes aegypti is an urban-dwelling mosquito, specifically adapted to humans and responsible for the transmission of dengue, chikungunya, yellow fever, and Zika virus infection. The dramatic emergence of Zika virus infection in Brazil in 2015, struck the crowded and impoverished northeastern city of Recife particularly hard [5], and there are concerns about Zika now traveling to additional New World and even Old World cities [6]. Since the end of 2013, chikungunya is also now affecting some of those same cities in the Americas, while, according to the Global Burden of Disease Study 2015 (GBD 2015), the number of global dengue cases has increased from approximately 33 million to 80 million incident cases annually over the last decade [7]. Similarly, urban rabies transmitted from dogs remains an important cause of mortality, although there has been almost a 50% decline over the last decade, with 17,400 deaths in 2015 according to the GBD 2015 [8]. While there are no global data comparing urban versus rural incidence rates of canine-transmitted rabies, in Delhi, India, urban slums were recently shown to exhibit higher dog bite incidence rates compared with rural slums, with the majority of both populations not receiving rabies postexposure prophylaxis [9].

Neglected bacterial infections: Leptospirosis, cholera, and typhoid fever

Leptospirosis has emerged as an important urban bacterial zoonosis from rat and dog urine, especially in the favelas of Brazil’s cities, such as Salvador where it is an important yet underreported cause of acute febrile illness [10]. The spatio-temporal determinants of infection there have been studied extensively [11]. Urban leptospirosis has also been reported in Nairobi [12]. Although not currently incorporated into the GBD 2015, a recent effort to determine the global burden of leptospirosis estimates approximately 1 million annual cases resulting in almost 3 million disability-adjusted life years [13]. However, the study did not report the percentage of cases found in urban versus rural environments. Similarly, there are multiple reports of cholera, typhoid fever, and other enteric infection outbreaks in urban slums and in the settings of poor urban planning or following urban natural disasters [1418]; however, there are no published global burden data that differentiate the urban and rural outbreaks.

Neglected parasitic infections

Urban schistosomiasis and ascariasis (as well as other soil-transmitted helminthiases) have been reported from Africa [1921] and Latin America [22, 23]. Interestingly, the Global Atlas of Helminth Infection found that ascariasis and trichuriasis transmission is highest in peri-urban rather than either urban or rural settings [24]. Some urban communities can also sustain lymphatic filariasis (LF) transmission [25], although it was shown recently that rural to urban migrations due to the conflicts in Sierra Leone and Liberia could not sustain LF transmission [26]. An outbreak of urban Chagas disease has also been reported from Venezuela and Peru [27, 28]. Urban zoonotic visceral leishmaniasis from dogs has been reported from Argentina and elsewhere in the Americas, with low-quality housing, crowding, and dog ownership representing some of the key risk factors [29, 30]. In India and elsewhere, vivax malaria also represents an important neglected parasitic infection, which has been refractory to control measures [31]. Giardiasis and other enteric protozoan infections have also been shown to cluster in urban environments [21, 32].

NTD and NCD comorbidities

Yet another phenomenon we might expect to see with increasing frequency in the new urban megacities is the increasing overlap of NTDs with NCDs. For example, in India a new high mortality has been seen in dengue patients with underlying hypertension and diabetes [33]. As NCDs expand in poor countries due to tobacco and lifestyle changes, we can expect to see further examples of such NTD comorbidities.

Overall, there is a dearth of information about the urban transmission of NTDs and very few disease burden estimates that distinguish urban versus rural modes of transmission. As global urbanization continues to increase, there is going to be an urgent need for such studies. By 2050, with most of the global population living in cities, we will need to better understand how NTDs and other poverty-related neglected diseases flourish in urban environments.

The UN is beginning to shape new public policies for global urbanization, which include programs for balanced urban growth and spatial distribution, sustainability, and timely collection of data required for urban planning [1]. The findings of significant and serious NTDs in urban areas mean that these diseases will also need to be considered as urban areas and megacities strive to meet their SDGs. Arbovirus infections, leptospirosis, cholera, and typhoid fever, vector-borne parasitic infections such as schistosomiasis, Chagas disease, leishmaniasis, and vivax malaria, and NTD–NCD comorbidities each represent the product of urban planning breakdowns and unchecked growth. Without adequate public health measures and research and development for new drugs, diagnostics, and vaccines, we can expect that these diseases will continue to thwart sustainable urban growth in the coming decades.

References

  1. 1. United Nations, Department of Economic and Social Affairs (2014) World Urbanization Prospects. 2014 Revision. http://www.un.org/en/development/desa/publications/2014-revision-world-urbanization-prospects.html. Accessed October 31, 2016.
  2. 2. World Health Organization. Bulletin of the World Health Organization. Urbanization and Health. http://www.who.int/bulletin/volumes/88/4/10-010410/en/, accessed December 17, 2016.
  3. 3. USGS. The USGS Water Science School. The Effects of Urbanization on Water Quality. http://water.usgs.gov/edu/urbanquality.html, accessed December 17, 2016
  4. 4. Hotez PJ (2014) Forgotten People Forgotten Diseases: The Neglected Tropical Diseases and their Impact on Global Health and Development, Second Edition. ASM Press 275 p.
  5. 5. De Araujo TV, Rodrigues LC, de Alencar Ximenes RA, de Barros Miranda-Filho D, Montarroyos UR, et al. (2016) Association between Zika virus infection and microcephaly in Brazil, January to May, 2016: preliminary report of a case-control study. Lancet Infect Dis 16(12):1356–63. pmid:27641777
  6. 6. Hotez PJ (2016) Will Zika return to the ‘Old World’? Microbes Infect 18(9): 527–8. pmid:27242327
  7. 7. GBD 2015 Disease and Injury Incidence and Prevalence Collaborators (2016) Global, regional, and national incidence, prevalence, and years lived with disability for 310 diseases and injuries, 1990–2015: a systematic analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2015. Lancet 388: 1545–602. pmid:27733282
  8. 8. GBD 2015 Mortality and Causes of Death Collaborators (2016) Global, regional, and national life expectancy, all-cause mortality, and cause-specific mortality for 249 causes of death, 1980–2015: a systematic analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2015. Lancet 388: 1549–544.
  9. 9. Sharma S, Agarwal A, Khan AM, Ingle GK (2016) Prevalence of dog bites in rural and urban slums of Delhi: a community-based study. Ann Med Health Sci Res 6(2): 115–9. pmid:27213095
  10. 10. Oliveira CR, Costa GS, Paploski IA, Kikuti M, Kasper AM, et al. (2016) Influenza-like illness in an urban community of Salvador, Brazil: incidence, seasonality and risk factors. BMC Infect Dis 16: 125. pmid:26975185
  11. 11. Hagan JE, Moraga P, Costa F, Capian N, Ribeiro GS, Wunder EA Jr, et al. (2016) Spatiotemporal Determinants of Urban Leptospirosis Transmission: Four-Year Prospective Cohort Study of Slum Residents in Brazil. PLoS Negl Trop Dis 10(1): e0004275. pmid:26771379
  12. 12. Halliday JE, Knobel DL, Allan KJ, de C Bronsvoort BM, Handel I, et al. (2013) Urban leptospirosis in Africa: a cross-sectional survey of Leptospiral infection in rodents in the Kibera urban settlement, Nairobi, Kenya. Am J Trop Med Hyg 89(6): 1095–102. pmid:24080637
  13. 13. Torgerson PR, Hagan JE, Costa F, Calcagno J, Kane M, et al. (2015) Global Burden of Leptospirosis: Estimated in Terms of Disability Adjusted Life Years. PLoS Negl Trop Dis 9(10): e0004122. pmid:26431366
  14. 14. Bi Q, Azman AS, Satter SM, Khan AI, Ahmed D, Riaj AA, et al. (2016) Micro-scale Spatial Clustering of Cholera Risk Factors in Urban Bangladesh. PLoS Negl Trop Dis 10(2): e0004400. pmid:26866926
  15. 15. United Nations Office for Disaster Risk Reduction. Cholera highlights urban risk factors. https://www.unisdr.org/archive/44762. Accessed October 31, 2016.
  16. 16. Steele AD, Hay Burgess DC, Diaz Z, Carey ME, Zaidi AK (2016) Challenges and opportunities for typhoid fever control: a call for coordinated action. Clin Infect Dis 62 Suppl 1: S4–8.
  17. 17. Chirisa I, Nyamadzawo L, Bandauko E, Mutsindikwa N (2015) The 2008/2009 cholera outbreak in Harare, Zimbabwe: case of failure in urban environmental health and planning. Rev Environ Health 30(2): 117–24. pmid:25992511
  18. 18. Ries AA, Vugia DJ, Beingolea L, Palacios AM, Vasquez E, et al. (1992) Cholera in Piura, Peru: a modern epidemic. J Infect Dis 166(6): 1429–33. pmid:1431259
  19. 19. Dabo A, Diarra AZ, Machault V, Toure O, Niambele DS et al (2015) Urban schistosomiasis and associated determinant factors among school children in Bamako, Mali, West Africa. Infect Dis Poverty 4:4. pmid:25973199
  20. 20. Davis SM, Worrell CM, Wiegand RE, Odero KO, Suchdev PS, et al. (2014) Soil-transmitted helminthes in pre-school-aged and school-aged children in an urban slum: a cross-sectional study of prevalence, distribution, and associated exposure. Am J Trop Med Hyg 91(5): 1002–10. pmid:25157123
  21. 21. Fuhrimann S, Winkler MS, Kabatereine NB, Tukahebwa EM, Halage AA, Rutebemberwa E, et al. (2016) Risk of Intestinal Parasitic Infections in People with Different Exposures to Wastewater and Fecal Sludge in Kampala, Uganda: A Cross-Sectional Study. PLoS Negl Trop Dis 10(3): e0004469. pmid:26938060
  22. 22. Blanton RE, Barbosa LM, Reis EA, Carmo TM, dos Santos CRA, Costa JM, et al. (2015) The Relative Contribution of Immigration or Local Increase for Persistence of Urban Schistosomiasis in Salvador, Bahia, Brazil. PLoS Negl Trop Dis 9(3): e0003521. pmid:25775457
  23. 23. Oliveira DS, Santos VB, Melo AG, Lima AS, Carvalho CD, Alegretti SM, et al. (2013) Schistosomiasis mansoni in urban northeast Brazil: influence of rainfall regime on the population dynamics of Biomphalaria sp. Rev Soc Bras Med Trop 46(5): 654–7. pmid:24270258
  24. 24. Pullan RL, Brooker SJ (2012) The global limits and population at risk of soil-transmitted helminth infections in 2010. Parasit Vectors 5: 81. pmid:22537799
  25. 25. Kouassi BL, de Souza DK, Geopaqui A, Narh CA, King SA, Mamadou BS, et al. (2015) Assessing the presence of Wuchereria bancrofti in vector and human populations from urban communities in Conakry, Guinea. Parasit Vectors 8: 492. pmid:26410739
  26. 26. de Souza DK, Sesay S, Moore MG, Ansumana R, Narh CA, Kollie K, et al. (2014) Related Rural-Urban Migration in Sierra Leone and Liberia. PLoS Negl Trop Dis 8(2): e2700. pmid:24516686
  27. 27. Alarcón de Noya B, Diaz-Bello Z, Colmenares C, Ruiz-Guevara R, Mauriello L, Zavala-Jaspe R, et al. (2010) Large urban outbreak of orally acquired acute Chagas disease at a school in Caracas, Venezuela. J Infect Dis 201(9): 1308–15. pmid:20307205
  28. 28. Khatchikian CE, Foley EA, Barbu CM, Hwang J, Ancca-Juárez J, Borrini-Mayori K, et al. (2015) Population Structure of the Chagas Disease Vector Triatoma infestans in an Urban Environment. PLoS Negl Trop Dis 9(2): e0003425. pmid:25646757
  29. 29. Lopez K, Tartaglino LC, Steinhorst II, Santini MS, Salomon OD (2016) Risk factors, representations and practices associated with emerging urban human visceral leishmaniasis in Posadas, Argentina. Biomedica 36(0): 51–63. pmid:27622625
  30. 30. Santini MS, Utgés ME, Berrozpe P, Manteca Acosta M, Casas N, et al. (2015) Lutzomyia longipalpis Presence and Abundance Distribution at Different Micro-spatial Scales in an Urban Scenario. PLoS Negl Trop Dis 9(8): e0003951. pmid:26274318
  31. 31. Anvikar AR, Shah N, Dariwal AC, Sonal GS, Pradhan MM, et al. (2016) Epidemiology of Plasmodium vivax malaria in India. Am J Trop Med Hyg 95 Supl 6 108–120.
  32. 32. Lal A, Hales S (2015) Heterogeneity in hotspots: spatio-temporal patterns in neglected parasitic diseases. Epidemiol Infect 143(3): 631–9. pmid:24819745
  33. 33. Mehta P, Hotez PJ (2016) NTD and NCD Co-morbidities: The Example of Dengue Fever. PLoS Negl Trop Dis 10(8): e0004619. pmid:27561091