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Emerging infectious disease: An underappreciated area of strategic concern for food security

Journal

TRANSBOUNDARY AND EMERGING DISEASES
Volume 69, Issue 2, Pages 254-267

Publisher

WILEY-HINDAWI
DOI: 10.1111/tbed.14009

Keywords

DAMA protocol; global climate change; global food security; global trade and travel; pathogen spillover and disease burden; Stockholm Paradigm

Funding

  1. Conselho Nacional em Ciencia e Tecnologia (CNPq-Brazil) [303940/2015-8]

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Emerging infectious diseases pose a threat to global food security and public health, with rising treatment costs and production losses. The coevolution between pathogens and hosts leads to the emergence of new diseases, while factors like global climate change and globalization contribute to the frequent occurrence of EIDs. Adopting proactive measures to anticipate and mitigate the impacts of emerging infectious diseases is crucial in addressing this global challenge.
Emerging infectious diseases (EIDs) increasingly threaten global food security and public health. Despite technological breakthroughs, we are losing the battle with (re)emerging diseases as treatment costs and production losses rise. A horizon scan of diseases of crops, livestock, seafood and food-borne illness suggests these costs are unsustainable. The paradigm of coevolution between pathogens and particular hosts teaches that emerging diseases occur only when pathogens evolve specific capacities that allow them to move to new hosts. EIDs ought to be rare and unpredictable, so crisis response is the best we can do. Alternatively, the Stockholm Paradigm suggests that the world is full of susceptible but unexposed hosts that pathogens could infect, given the opportunity. Global climate change, globalized trade and travel, urbanization and land-use changes (often associated with biodiversity loss) increase those opportunities, making EID frequent. We can, however, anticipate their arrival in new locations and their behaviour once they have arrived. We can 'find them before they find us', mitigating their impacts. The DAMA (Document, Assess, Monitor, Act) protocol alters the current reactive stance and embodies proactive solutions to anticipate and mitigate the impacts of EID, extending human and material resources and buying time for development of new vaccinations, medications and control measures.

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