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NIHHIS News

El Niño and Rift Valley Fever Emerging Health Risk Notification
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El Niño and Rift Valley Fever Emerging Health Risk Notification

NOAA partners with Department of Defense, US Department of Agriculture, NASA, Department of Homeland Security and the Centers for Disease Control to issue notification of emerging risk of Rift Valley Fever (RVF) in East Africa due to El Niño-related rains.

RVF is a mosquito-transmitted disease causing livestock and human illness and death. The 2006-2007 outbreaks in Kenya, Somalia, Tanzania, Sudan, and Madagascar are estimated to have caused more than 200,000 human infections with more than 500 deaths, and cost Kenya alone $32 million from livestock losses and international export bans. With sufficient lead times livestock vaccines can be deployed and mosquito control efforts can be implemented.

This notification a pilot effort of an El Niño and Health subgroup, lead by CPO and the Armed Forces Health Surveillance Branch under the auspices of the OSTP-led Pandemic Prediction Forecasting Science and Technology Working Group (PPFST). The PPFST is an interagency working group that integrates Federal expertise to synthesize risk information and response options for biological threats to US citizens and interests.

The Emerging Health Risk Notification was published on Dec. 20, 2015. Access the notification here

Learn more about the connection between El Nino and RVF at: Climate.gov

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Eight cities slated to run Urban Heat Island mapping campaigns in summer 2019 21 June 2019

Eight cities slated to run Urban Heat Island mapping campaigns in summer 2019

Community organizers in eight U.S. cities have been offered support for UHI mapping campaigns through the National Integrated Heat Health Information System (NIHHIS) and CPO’s Communication, Education, and Engagement Division.

Ready for summer heat? Study finds new primary driver of extreme Texas heat waves 28 June 2018

Ready for summer heat? Study finds new primary driver of extreme Texas heat waves

A team of scientists found that a strengthened change in ocean temperatures from west to east (or gradient) in the tropical Pacific during the preceding winter is the main driver of more frequent heat waves in Texas. 

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Urban Heat Island Community of Practice webinar series continues with “Examining Structural and Physical Infrastructure”

Urban Heat Island Community of Practice webinar series continues with “Examining Structural and Physical Infrastructure”

On September 13th at 3PM EDT, the fourth of the NIHHIS webinar series, "Structural and Physical Infrastructure", will take place highlighting communities that have implemented solutions to make their built environment cooler and more resilient to heat. Presentations will provide an overview of how cool roofs and solar-reflective walls work and the multitude of benefits they provide. The session will provide resources and suggestions for participants just getting started thinking about which cool solutions in the built environment can be part of their portfolio of actions to mitigate urban heat risk. Learn more about the webinars and register here

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Urban Heat Island Community of Practice Webinar Series continues with "Green Cooling Infrastructure"

Urban Heat Island Community of Practice Webinar Series continues with "Green Cooling Infrastructure"

The National Integrated Heat Health Information System (NIHHIS) and its partners are hosting a webinar series to feature case studies on what happens after communities conduct their urban heat island mapping campaigns. On September 30th at 3PM EDT, the fifth of the series, "Green Cooling Infrastructure" will take place and will feature communities that have implemented solutions to obtain heat resilience through green infrastructure. The session will highlight case studies from Philadelphia and Pawtucket and explore how they were able to implement green infrastructure, and by doing so, strengthen community cohesion and resilience. The intersection with environmental justice, public health, crime reduction, and equitable approaches to improvements that benefit residents will be threaded throughout the webinar.

Register and learn more

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Address: 1315 East-West Hwy, Suite 1100
Silver Spring, MD 20910

About Us

NIHHIS is an integrated information system that builds understanding of the problem of extreme heat, defines demand for climate services that enhance societal resilience, develops science-based products and services from a sustained climate science research program, and improves capacity, communication, and societal understanding of the problem in order to reduce morbidity and mortality due to extreme heat.  NIHHIS is a jointly developed system by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

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