Malaria cases in the United States are increasing and Lyme Disease cases are appearing as far west as Michigan. Is climate change to blame or are there other factors at play? With insights from U.T. Austin pediatric infectious disease specialist Dr. Nael Mhaissen, we don a pair of nitrile gloves and get up and close with microbes and the vectors that bear them.
Learning Objective: By the end of this episode, pediatric residents will be able to recognize the relationship between a warming climate and the geographical spread of vector-borne disease such as malaria and Lyme Disease, as well as non-vector-borne infectious agents such as diarrheal illness and fungal infections.