通过全球卫生方法预防下一次大流行:关注人畜共患病的主要驱动因素

Challenges Pub Date : 2022-09-30 DOI:10.3390/challe13020050
Y. Tajudeen, H. Oladipo, I. Oladunjoye, Mutiat Oluwakemi Mustapha, Sheriff Taye Mustapha, Adam Aberi Abdullahi, Rashidat Onyinoyi Yusuf, S. Abimbola, A. Adebayo, Joy Ginika Ikebuaso, D. Adesuyi, Blessed Okereke, Abass Olawale Omotosho, Abdulhakeem Funsho Ahmed, M. El-Sherbini
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引用次数: 3

摘要

2019年冠状病毒病(COVID-19)的病原sars - cov -2对全球健康的影响不断增加,加上其社会经济负担,不仅揭示了人类对具有大流行潜力的人畜共患病原体的脆弱性,而且也为全球卫生界敲响了警钟,要求他们重新思考预防未来大流行的可持续方法。然而,由于生物多样性和生态系统服务政府间科学政策平台(IPBES)召集的专家们宣布,未来的流行病很可能源于人畜共患病,因此我们必须了解人畜共患病的主要驱动因素,如生物多样性丧失、气候变化、野生动物消耗和人口流动,以及支撑这些因素的科学证据。在本文中,我们强调了这些驱动因素与人畜共患病的出现和再次出现的相关性。因此,我们强调需要在地球健康方法下,在环境和人类健康领域的研究人员之间进行多学科合作,以填补关于人畜共患病主要驱动因素的知识和研究空白。这是为了通过保护地球的自然系统及其资源以及保障人类和动物健康来预防或限制未来的流行病。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Preventing the Next Pandemic through a Planetary Health Approach: A Focus on Key Drivers of Zoonosis
The ever-increasing global health impact of SARS-CoV-2—the etiological agent of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)—coupled with its socio-economic burden, has not only revealed the vulnerability of humanity to zoonotic pathogens of pandemic potential but also serves as a wake-up call for global health communities to rethink sustainable approaches towards preventing future pandemics. However, since the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES) convened experts have declared that future pandemics are likely to be zoonotic in origin, it is imperative that we understand the key drivers of zoonosis such as biodiversity loss, climate change, wildlife consumption, and population mobility, as well as the scientific evidence underpinning them. In this article, we underscore the correlations of these drivers with the emergence and re-emergence of zoonosis. Consequently, we highlighted the need for multidisciplinary collaboration under the planetary health approach between researchers across the fields of environmental and human health to fill the knowledge and research gaps on key drivers of zoonosis. This is to prevent or limit future pandemics by protecting the natural systems of the Earth and its resources and safeguarding human and animal health.
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