Moving Into Age of Pandemics Due to Climate Change

Saqib Hussain, Maryam Hassan, Syeda Arifa Batool Sherazi, I. Karim
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Abstract

The early effects of the global climate change have been extensively studied but future effects on ecological health, human, domestic animal, and wildlife health, however, are significantly less well understood. Due to climate change, ancient bacteria and viruses that have laid asleep for thousands of years are reawakening as permafrost soils that have frozen for several thousands of years, melt. 218 of the 375 infectious diseases that humanity has faced over the planet have at some point been made worse by climatic dangers. Empirical cases showed 1,006 distinct ways that climatic risks, through various modes of transmission, led to deadly diseases. For complete societal adaptations to be effective there are too many human pathogenic diseases and modes of transmission that are exacerbated by climate hazards. This underscores the urgent need to address the root cause of the issue, which is reducing Green House Gas emissions. In addition to releasing these toxic chemicals, thawing permafrost also poses a health risk because it could release a variety of hibernating diseases, including novel and previously unidentified antibiotic-resistant bacteria, viruses, fungi, and parasites. Our immune system is underdeveloped and will need to undergo major adaptation, known as allostasis, which is also referred to as permafrost immunity.  Climate change, for instance, may result in a wide range of microbiological, vector, and host reactions, while not all organisms may react in the same way or over the same amount of time. Unfortunately, our scientific community has a fairly limited grasp of the current effectors and balances for many creatures and ecosystems, making it difficult to characterize the current condition, let alone to verify predictions for the future. It is clear that improved basic systematic surveillance and research programs are required, but implementing such programs is challenging and what is done during the coming years could be crucial.
由于气候变化而进入流行病时代
全球气候变化的早期影响已经得到了广泛的研究,但对生态健康、人类、家畜和野生动物健康的未来影响却知之甚少。由于气候变化,沉睡了数千年的古老细菌和病毒随着冻结了数千年的永久冻土融化而重新苏醒。人类在地球上面临的375种传染病中,有218种在某种程度上因气候危险而恶化。经验案例表明,通过各种传播方式,气候风险以1006种不同方式导致致命疾病。为了使完全的社会适应有效,有太多的人类致病性疾病和传播方式因气候危害而加剧。这强调了迫切需要解决问题的根本原因,即减少温室气体排放。除了释放这些有毒化学物质外,解冻永久冻土还会带来健康风险,因为它可能会释放出各种冬眠疾病,包括新型和以前未发现的耐抗生素细菌、病毒、真菌和寄生虫。我们的免疫系统不发达,需要经历重大的适应过程,即所谓的“适应平衡”,也被称为“永久冻土免疫”。例如,气候变化可能导致广泛的微生物、媒介和宿主反应,而并非所有生物都可能以相同的方式或在相同的时间内作出反应。不幸的是,我们的科学界对许多生物和生态系统的当前效应和平衡的掌握相当有限,这使得很难描述当前的状况,更不用说验证对未来的预测了。很明显,需要改进基本的系统监测和研究项目,但实施这些项目具有挑战性,未来几年的工作可能至关重要。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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