Emergence of epidemic diseases: zoonoses and other origins.

Faculty reviews Pub Date : 2022-01-18 eCollection Date: 2022-01-01 DOI:10.12703/r/11-2
Robin A Weiss, Neeraja Sankaran
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引用次数: 10

Abstract

Infectious diseases emerge via many routes and may need to overcome stepwise bottlenecks to burgeon into epidemics and pandemics. About 60% of human infections have animal origins, whereas 40% either co-evolved with humans or emerged from non-zoonotic environmental sources. Although the dynamic interaction between wildlife, domestic animals, and humans is important for the surveillance of zoonotic potential, exotic origins tend to be overemphasized since many zoonoses come from anthropophilic wild species (for example, rats and bats). We examine the equivocal evidence of whether the appearance of novel infections is accelerating and relate technological developments to the risk of novel disease outbreaks. Then we briefly compare selected epidemics, ancient and modern, from the Plague of Athens to COVID-19.

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流行病的出现:人畜共患病和其他起源。
传染病通过多种途径出现,可能需要逐步克服瓶颈,才能发展成流行病和流行病。大约60%的人类感染源于动物,而40%的感染源于与人类共同进化或非人畜共患环境。尽管野生动物、家畜和人类之间的动态互动对于监测人畜共患潜力很重要,但由于许多人畜共患病来自亲人类的野生物种(例如老鼠和蝙蝠),因此往往过于强调外来起源。我们研究了新感染的出现是否正在加速的模棱两可的证据,并将技术发展与新疾病爆发的风险联系起来。然后,我们简要比较了从雅典瘟疫到新冠肺炎的古代和现代流行病。
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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