Urbanization, climate change and health vulnerabilities in slum communities in Ghana
Date
2023
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
The Journal of Climate Change and Health
Abstract
Introduction: Rapid population growth, increased migration, surge urbanization and human settlement chal lenges have become defining features of most African cities. Accra, the capital of Ghana, is no exception as its
fast-urbanizing processes and associated housing challenges have seen the emergence of slum communities
in and around the city. While slum communities are not new in Accra nor in Ghana, what is worrying is the
current pace of emergence, the state of such communities, population density and levels of vulnerability.
Even more worrying are the observed impacts of climate-induced extreme weather events on such commu nities and attendant health consequences.
Methodology: Focusing on some slum communities in and around the city of Accra, this paper investigates the
environmental health conditions of slum communities and how such conditions converge with climate
change impact manifestations to increase disease burden. The paper employed a concurrent triangulation
mixed method approach to simultaneously gather data from randomly selected slum communities in the
Accra Metropolitan Assembly and La-Nkwantanang Madina municipality to explore possible correlations
between current changes in climate and public health challenges.
Conclusion: The results affirm a correlation between observed climate change impacts and prevailing health
conditions in the selected slum communities. There is ample evidence to signal both direct and indirect link ages between climate-induced weather events and increased prevalence of diseases such as malaria, diar rhea, cholera, skin disease, lung diseases, as well as the emergence of novel diseases in the target slum
communities. The study, ultimately, succeeds in demonstrating the nexus of climate change, health, and
urbanization.
Description
Research Article
Keywords
Climate change, Urban poor, Floods