21世纪的寄生虫学:我们正朝着正确的方向前进吗?

IF 2
Kinga Kowalewska-Grochowska, Romina Reyes, Pauline Tomlin
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引用次数: 0

摘要

几千年来,寄生虫感染一直是对人类健康的一个持续挑战。尽管科学和医学不断取得进展,但这一挑战多年来基本没有变化,部分原因是宿主-寄生虫-环境关系极其复杂。在过去的一个世纪里,我们应对这些挑战的方法随着科学技术的长足进步而不断演变,提供了新的、更好的解决方案。不幸的是,在21世纪,这种诊断进化突然面临着历史上从未见过的生物关系的巨大变化。人口、全球化和超连接技术的不受控制的扩张对个人、社区和环境产生了巨大的社会经济影响,在整个寄生虫世界产生了连锁反应。城市化、污染和对自然资源的不可持续开发造成了生物量的变化和栖息地的破碎,导致寄生虫向新的寄主和领土移动。与此同时,由于武装冲突和贫困,人口结构和分布发生了变化,造成了整个国家和社区的大规模移徙,导致寄生虫病重新分布。使情况更糟的是,北美和欧洲许多接收国的人口正在老龄化,导致应对新的诊断挑战所必需的专业劳动力严重短缺。不幸的是,这种恶性循环并不是对所有人都很明显。在不久的将来,高度专业化的寄生虫学领域面临着发生此类重大危机的特别危险。提高对此类风险的认识是开始讨论和规划以减轻这些非常现实的健康威胁的必要步骤。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Parasitology of the twenty-first century: are we moving in the right direction?

For thousands of years, parasitic infections have represented a constant challenge to human health. Despite constant progress in science and medicine, the challenge has remained mostly unchanged over the years, partly due to the vast complexity of the host-parasite-environment relationships. Over the last century, our approaches to these challenges have evolved through considerable advances in science and technology, offering new and better solutions. Unfortunately, in the twenty-first century, this diagnostic evolution was suddenly confronted with a dramatic change of biological relationships, never witnessed in history before the uncontrolled expansion of the human population, globalization and hyperconnectivity technology have exerted a massive socioeconomic impact on individuals, communities and the environment, sending a ripple effect throughout the world of parasites. Urbanization, pollution and the unsustainable exploitation of natural resources have caused shifts in biomass and the fragmentation of habitats, leading to the movement of parasites into new hosts and territories. At the same time, changes in human population structure and distributions due to armed conflict and poverty created massive migration of entire nations and communities, resulting in the redistribution of parasitic diseases. To make the situation worse, the population of many receiving countries of North America and Europe is ageing, leading to a critical shortage of a specialized workforce essential to deal with the new diagnostic challenges. Unfortunately, this vicious circle is not yet apparent to all. The highly specialized field of parasitology is at a particular risk for such major crises in the near future. Heightened awareness of such risks is an essential step to start discussions and planning to mitigate these very real health threats.

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