农业实践如何影响传染性病原体对人类污染的风险:“同一个健康”观点的必要性

A. Ratnadass, S. Sarter
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引用次数: 0

摘要

我们在全球地理范围内对农业作物生产实践(不包括作物保护实践)与生物人类健康危害之间的相互作用进行了全面的文献综述。大多数相关参考文献涉及细菌污染和感染,主要是由于抗生素耐药性这一重要的公共卫生问题。指示大肠菌群尤其显著(只有少数提到有害的大肠杆菌菌株),其次是沙门氏菌、弯曲杆菌、梭状芽胞杆菌、假单胞菌和李斯特菌属。原生动物隐孢子虫和贾第鞭毛虫,寄生虫蛔虫和毛线虫占多数。肠道病毒在很大程度上主导了对病毒的提及(特别是诺如病毒和轮状病毒)。很少有文献提到人类真菌病原体。新鲜蔬菜是最常被提及的作物,尤其是绿叶蔬菜和生吃的蔬菜,因为灌溉使用废水,用牲畜粪便和人类排泄物/污水污泥施肥,这些都是潜在的不安全做法。虽然早先的文献综述表明,作物保护做法是“同一个健康”概念的核心,但本综述表明,其他农业做法也可以通过不同途径促进人类和环境健康,包括改善土壤健康、水质、改善食品安全和改善人类营养。我们的审查强调,除了权衡之外,还应从农业生态和“同一个健康”的角度出发,在一方面节约/保护淡水和有机废物回收(影响环境健康和人类健康的某些方面)与另一方面与使用可能受污染的废物有关的健康危害(影响人类健康的其他方面)之间寻求协同增效。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
How agricultural practices affect the risk of human contamination by infectious pathogens: the need for a ‘One Health’ perspective
We conducted a comprehensive literature review with a global geographic scope, of interactions between agricultural crop production practices (excluding crop protection practices) and biological human health hazards. The majority of relevant references dealt with bacterial contaminations and infections, largely due to the important public health issue of antibiotic resistance. Indicator coliforms were particularly significant (only a minority mentioned harmful Escherichia coli strains), followed by species belonging to Salmonella , Campylobacter , Clostridia , Pseudomonas , and Listeria genera. Protozoan Cryptosporidium spp. and Giardia spp., and helminthic Ascaris spp. and Trichuris spp. dominated the references to parasites. Enteric viruses largely dominated the references to viruses (particularly noroviruses and rotaviruses). Very few references mentioned human fungal pathogens. Fresh vegetables were the most commonly mentioned crops, particularly leafy greens and those eaten raw, due to the use of wastewater for irrigation, and fertilization with livestock manure and human excreta/sewage sludge, potentially unsafe practices. While earlier literature reviews have shown that crop protection practices are central to the One Health concept, this review shows that other agricultural practices can also contribute to human and environmental health via different pathways, including better soil health, water quality, better food safety, and human nutrition. Our review underlines that besides tradeoffs, synergies should be sought, between, on the one hand, saving/preserving freshwater and organic waste recycling (affecting environmental health and some aspects of human health), and health hazards associated with the use of potentially contaminated waste on the other (affecting other aspects of human health), from both agroecological and One Health perspectives.
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