A new study shows that insect-spread diseases in the Brazilian Amazon follow distinct regional patterns tied to land use, rural economies and environmental shifts. Published in Communications Earth & Environment, the research examined over 1.28 million cases of malaria, dengue, Chagas disease and leishmaniasis from 2015 to 2019. Findings indicate these illnesses cluster differently based on landscape changes, ranging from forest livelihoods to farming and urban growth. In remote forested zones reliant on small-scale agriculture and resource extraction, malaria and Chagas disease often appeared together amid poverty and weak healthcare. Agricultural and urban areas instead showed overlaps of dengue and cutaneous leishmaniasis. Visceral leishmaniasis aligned more with urban poverty, fires, climate extremes and cattle economies. Researchers note that broader social and environmental factors shape these patterns beyond insect vectors alone. The results may aid targeted surveillance and suggest that curbing deforestation and improving land management could yield public health gains.
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