亚洲的肉类生产和人畜共患病爆发

IF 2.6 3区 经济学 Q2 AGRICULTURAL ECONOMICS & POLICY
Ore Koren, Jessica Steinberg, Amit Hagar
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引用次数: 0

摘要

肉类生产与传染病之间有联系吗?研究人员、政策制定者和专家学者认为,亚洲对肉类需求的增长会增加人畜共患病的风险,这些疾病是源于动物并可传染给人类的病原体。本研究利用 1996 年至 2019 年期间 22 个亚洲国家爆发人畜共患病的原始数据,研究了牛肉、鸡肉和猪肉生产对人畜共患病爆发的影响,重点关注所有疾病和分类子类别。由于此类疫情爆发会导致宰杀动物,因此使用无机化学肥料使用数据来确定肉类生产与疫情爆发之间看似外生的关系。结果表明,在这些国家,密集型肉类生产可能导致人畜共患病爆发率上升 16%-300%(产量增加 100 万吨)。研究结果还表明,这种关系主要是由于流感病原体对肉类生产的敏感性较高,产量增加 100 万吨,预计流感爆发的次数就会增加 48%-530%。在对建模、操作和数据选择进行多次敏感性分析后,这些结果是一致的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Meat production and zoonotic disease outbreaks in Asia

Meat production and zoonotic disease outbreaks in Asia

Is there a link between meat production and infectious diseases? Researchers, policymakers and pundits argue that the growth of demand for meat in Asia can increase the risk of zoonotic diseases, pathogens that originate in animals and can be transmitted to humans. Using original data on zoonotic disease outbreaks in 22 Asian countries between 1996 and 2019, this study examines the impact of beef, chicken and pork production on zoonotic outbreaks—focussing on all diseases and disaggregated subcategories. Because such outbreaks lead to culling animals, data on inorganic chemical fertiliser use are used to identify the plausibly exogenous relationship flowing from meat production to outbreaks. Results indicate that in these countries, intensive meat production may have contributed to a 16%–300% rise (for a one-million-tonne increase in output) in zoonotic outbreak incidence. Findings also suggest this relationship is primarily driven by flu pathogens' higher sensitivity to meat production, with a one-million-tonne increase in output being associated with a 48%–530% rise in the number of predicted flu outbreaks. These results are consistent across numerous sensitivity analyses accounting for modelling, operationalisation, and data selection choices.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
6.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
36
审稿时长
>24 weeks
期刊介绍: The Australian Journal of Agricultural and Resource Economics (AJARE) provides a forum for innovative and scholarly work in agricultural and resource economics. First published in 1997, the Journal succeeds the Australian Journal of Agricultural Economics and the Review of Marketing and Agricultural Economics, upholding the tradition of these long-established journals. Accordingly, the editors are guided by the following objectives: -To maintain a high standard of analytical rigour offering sufficient variety of content so as to appeal to a broad spectrum of both academic and professional economists and policymakers. -In maintaining the tradition of its predecessor journals, to combine articles with policy reviews and surveys of key analytical issues in agricultural and resource economics.
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