The Deadly Nexus: Climate Change, Pathogens, and Political Denial

By Daniel Brouse
August 6, 2025

A recent study published in JAMA Health Forum, titled “Global Estimates of Lives and Life-Years Saved by COVID-19 Vaccination During 2020-2024”, provides powerful evidence of the lifesaving impact of COVID-19 vaccines. The study estimates that vaccinations prevented 2.5 million deaths globally over the 2020–2024 period. The sensitivity analysis suggests a possible range between 1.4 million and 4.0 million lives saved. Additionally, the vaccines preserved an estimated 15 million life-years, with a range of 7 to 24 million life-years spared from loss.

These findings underscore the immense value of vaccines—not only in saving lives but also in preserving health and longevity across the globe. And yet, despite this overwhelming success, vaccine research and preparedness in the U.S. is under threat.

In a controversial move, the Trump administration—under the direction of Robert F. Kennedy Jr., now serving as U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services (HHS)—has halted federal funding for further mRNA vaccine development. In total, approximately $500 million in contracts and grants have been canceled. The cuts affect 22 projects overseen by the Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority (BARDA), including key partnerships with Pfizer and Moderna focused on next-generation vaccines for COVID-19 and influenza.

Kennedy claims the decision was based on concerns that current mRNA vaccines are not sufficiently effective against upper respiratory infections. Instead, HHS will shift focus to what Kennedy calls “better solutions.” However, scientists and public health experts widely disagree with this decision.

Experts argue that mRNA vaccines have proven remarkably successful, especially at preventing severe disease, hospitalization, and death. The cancellation of these projects threatens to weaken pandemic preparedness, slow down vaccine innovation, and leave the country vulnerable to future outbreaks.

Critics also point to Kennedy’s long history of anti-vaccine activism. Before joining the administration, he led the Children’s Health Defense, a group notorious for spreading vaccine misinformation. Kennedy has no formal medical or scientific qualifications, and his decisions now risk reversing hard-won public health progress.

The contrast is stark: while scientific studies confirm the critical role vaccines have played in saving millions of lives, the current political leadership is actively dismantling the infrastructure needed to build on that success. If the U.S. fails to support vaccine innovation and public health readiness, it may not only undo past gains—but also face graver consequences in the pandemics to come.

Compounding the danger of vaccine defunding is the Trump administration’s parallel attack on climate and public health science. The combination of climate denialism and anti-science policymaking is not only shortsighted—it is exponentially dangerous.

One of the most alarming but underreported consequences of climate change is the escalating risk of infectious disease outbreaks. As global temperatures rise and precipitation patterns shift, climate hazards are altering ecosystems and expanding the reach of disease vectors like mosquitoes, ticks, and rodents. These changes not only allow pathogens to survive longer and in more regions, but also increase the chances of zoonotic spillover events, where diseases jump from animals to humans as happened with COVID-19.

A landmark study published in Nature drove home the severity of this threat:

“Over half of known human pathogenic diseases can be aggravated by climate change.”

The researchers found that 58% of all infectious diseases—including malaria, dengue, Lyme disease, hantavirus, cholera, and even COVID-19—are being exacerbated by climate-related hazards such as flooding, heatwaves, drought, wildfires, and sea level rise.

“The human pathogenic diseases and transmission pathways aggravated by climatic hazards are too numerous for comprehensive societal adaptations. Managing one or two diseases is feasible. But when 58% of diseases are being affected or triggered in 1,000 different ways, it becomes clear we are not going to be able to adapt to climate change.”

This insight is chilling: the scale and speed at which pathogens are evolving and spreading outpace our current public health systems, particularly in nations that are slashing research budgets and ignoring the science.

And yet, the Trump administration has aggressively defunded both climate research and public health initiatives. Programs that once tracked and modeled disease-vector migration, climate-linked outbreaks, and early warning systems for zoonotic spillovers have been dismantled. These cuts, combined with the rollback of environmental protections and vaccine research funding, represent a systemic dismantling of our national resilience to converging crises.

Rather than preparing for a future in which climate and health threats are increasingly intertwined, the U.S. is being steered in the opposite direction—toward deliberate ignorance. The consequences are not theoretical: they are already unfolding in the form of worsening pandemics, overwhelmed health systems, and rising mortality.

It’s no longer just about failing to act. These policies represent an active acceleration of risk, amplifying the likelihood of mass death, economic collapse, and public distrust.

In an age where science offers us the tools to save lives, choosing to ignore it is not only negligent—it is lethal.

Conclusion
Health feedback loops, violent rain, and deadly humid heat are fueling an exponential rise in climate-related deaths. This lethal triad — disease, extreme heat, and intense rainfall — demonstrates that climate change is not a distant threat but a rapidly accelerating public health emergency. These stressors interact and amplify one another, creating a cascade of compounding impacts that demand urgent intervention.

All 50 U.S. states — including Alaska — are already experiencing deadly humid heat advisories. Large regions of the country are becoming uninhabitable for weeks or even months each year due to extreme heat. Wet-bulb temperatures are approaching 31°C (87.8°F) in multiple states — a physiological threshold beyond which sustained outdoor survival is impossible, even with water and shade. Meanwhile, violent rain events are killing hundreds and causing billions in annual damage. Climate-driven health feedback loops have become the leading cause of mortality in the United States — fueled by systemic interactions between temperature extremes, air quality degradation, disease vectors, and infrastructure collapse. Addressing climate change is no longer just an environmental imperative — it is a public health necessity.

Our climate model — which incorporates complex socio-economic and ecological feedback loops within a dynamic, nonlinear system — projects that global temperatures could rise by up to 9°C (16.2°F) within this century. This far exceeds earlier estimates of a 4°C rise over the next thousand years, highlighting a dramatic acceleration in global warming. We are now entering a phase of compound, cascading collapse, where climate, ecological, and societal systems destabilize through interlinked, self-reinforcing feedback loops.

We examine how human activities — such as deforestation, fossil fuel combustion, mass consumption, industrial agriculture, and land development — interact with ecological processes like thermal energy redistribution, carbon cycling, hydrological flow, biodiversity loss, and the spread of disease vectors. These interactions do not follow linear cause-and-effect patterns. Instead, they form complex, self-reinforcing feedback loops that can trigger rapid, system-wide transformations — often abruptly and without warning. Grasping these dynamics is crucial for accurately assessing global risks and developing effective strategies for long-term survival.

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

Trumpenomics: The Decline of the US

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