Climate, Migration, and Sodium Sensitivity: A Systems-Level Hypothesis for Hypertension Risk in Migrant Populations

Weekes, Sean Somersall- (2025) Climate, Migration, and Sodium Sensitivity: A Systems-Level Hypothesis for Hypertension Risk in Migrant Populations. International Journal of Innovative Science and Research Technology, 10 (9): 25sep1077. pp. 2201-2203. ISSN 2456-2165

Abstract

Emerging evidence suggests that thermoregulatory mechanisms, particularly sweat-mediated sodium excretion, play a critical role in modulating blood pressure among salt-sensitive individuals. This paper proposes a novel hypothesis: that migration from hot to cooler climates may inadvertently elevate hypertension risk in salt-sensitive populations due to reduced sweat output and consequent sodium retention. Drawing on physiological, behavioural, and epidemiological insights, we explore how climate-driven changes in sodium metabolism intersect with ethnicity, dietary patterns, and public health screening protocols. The hypothesis is situated within a broader framework of migration health equity, highlighting the need for culturally and environmentally responsive interventions. We argue for the integration of climate-adjusted risk modelling into NHS screening strategies and propose targeted behavioural insight trials to assess the impact of thermoregulatory shifts on cardiovascular outcomes. This systems-level perspective reframes hypertension not merely as a clinical condition, but as a governance challenge shaped by climate, culture, and physiology.

Documents
2979:17810
[thumbnail of IJISRT25SEP1077.pdf]
IJISRT25SEP1077.pdf - Published Version

Download (371kB)
Information
Library
Metrics

Altmetric Metrics

Dimensions Matrics

Statistics

Downloads

Downloads per month over past year

View Item