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TITLE:

THE PUBLIC HEALTH RISK OF DIARRHEA IN LAHORE IS EXPECTED TO EXACERBATE THE CLIMATE CHANGE

AUTHORS:

Dr Hamza Saeed, Bilal Younas, Dr Wateen Munir

ABSTRACT:

Diarrheal disorder is a huge problem for the health of youngest people around the world. Environmental change is important to increase the global weight of diarrheal disease, but with respect to drivers of the atmosphere, especially in Pakistan, little is understood. We analyzed diarrheal disease reporting month by month amongst patients who have joined Lahore 's welfare centres, using well-being details from Lahore scattered over a 32-year time span (1998–2009) and comparing this with climate influences. In March (ANOVA p<0.002) and October (ANOVA p < 0.002) individual case rates are provided by a bimodal repeat system, which can be reproducible in the rainy or dry season. In the quantity of recorded loose boy cases at the slack amount of one month, there is a clear positive autocorrelation (p<0.002). Occasional diarrheal with 1-month slack in factors (p<0.001) was expected due to climactic factors (presumption, lower temperature and smoke pressure). Our current research was conducted at Mayo Hospital, Lahore from March 2019 to February 2020. Diarrheal cases have been higher in the dry season, with a 22-% increase over the mean yearly average (p < 0,002) as a result of multiple causes. Our analysis advises that changes in temperature and declines in precipitation will increase the occurrence of dry season diarrhea, with warmer, dry conditions starting early and lasting longer. The risk of diarrheal disease is expected to decline in the wet season. Our findings recognize big partnerships in a stable environment with the need for an improved core of general well-being in Lahore to monitor diarrheal disease. Study results refer to other dry countries in Pakistan where diarrheal disease is a continuous general medical issue. Keywords: Public Health Risk, Diarrhea, Climate Change.

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