The socio-ecology of zoonotic infections

The resurgence of infectious diseases of zoonotic origin observed in recent years imposes a major morbidity/mortality burden worldwide, and also a major economic burden that extends beyond pure medical costs. The resurgence and epidemiology of zoonoses are complex and dynamic, being influenced by va...

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Veröffentlicht in:Clinical microbiology and infection 2011-03, Vol.17 (3), p.336-342
Hauptverfasser: Cascio, A., Bosilkovski, M., Rodriguez-Morales, A.J., Pappas, G.
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container_end_page 342
container_issue 3
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container_title Clinical microbiology and infection
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creator Cascio, A.
Bosilkovski, M.
Rodriguez-Morales, A.J.
Pappas, G.
description The resurgence of infectious diseases of zoonotic origin observed in recent years imposes a major morbidity/mortality burden worldwide, and also a major economic burden that extends beyond pure medical costs. The resurgence and epidemiology of zoonoses are complex and dynamic, being influenced by varying parameters that can roughly be categorized as human-related, pathogen-related, and climate/environment-related; however, there is significant interplay between these factors. Human-related factors include modern life trends such as ecotourism, increased exposure through hunting or pet owning, and culinary habits, industrialization sequelae such as farming/food chain intensification, globalization of trade, human intrusion into ecosystems and urbanization, significant alterations in political regimes, conflict with accompanying breakdown of public health and surveillance infrastructure, voluntary or involuntary immigration, loosening of border controls, and hierarchy issues in related decision-making, and scientific advances that allow easier detection of zoonotic infections and evolution of novel susceptible immunocompromised populations. Pathogen-related factors include alterations in ecosystems and biodiversity that influence local fauna synthesis, favouring expansion of disease hosts or vectors, pressure for virulence/resistance selection, and genomic variability. Climate/environment-related factors, either localized or extended, such as El Niño southern oscillation or global warming, may affect host–vector life cycles through varying mechanisms. Emerging issues needing clarification include the development of predictive models for the infectious disease impact of environmental projects, awareness of the risk imposed on immunocompromised populations, recognition of the chronicity burden for certain zoonoses, and the development of different evaluations of the overall stress imposed by a zoonotic infection on a household, and not strictly a person.
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subjects Agriculture
Animals
Climate Change
Climate changes
Communicable Disease Control - economics
Communicable Disease Control - trends
Communicable Diseases, Emerging - economics
Communicable Diseases, Emerging - etiology
Communicable Diseases, Emerging - prevention & control
Disease Reservoirs
ecology
emergence
Emigration and Immigration
Humans
outbreak
review
Travel
Zoonoses - epidemiology
Zoonoses - microbiology
Zoonoses - parasitology
zoonotic infections
title The socio-ecology of zoonotic infections
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