4.7 Article

Discovering environmental management opportunities for infectious disease control

Journal

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
Volume 11, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-85250-1

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Water Informatics Science and Engineering Centre for Doctoral Training (WISE CDT) under EPSRC [EP/L016214/1]
  2. Royal Society Wolfson Research Merit Award
  3. BBSRC LoLa Consortium, BUG: Building Upon the Genome [BB/M003949/1]
  4. University of Liverpool's Institute of Infection and Global Health
  5. BBSRC [BB/M003949/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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Climate change and emerging drug resistance have made infectious disease control more challenging, prompting the need for alternative solutions such as environmental management. This study uses fasciolosis in livestock in the UK as a case study to demonstrate how environmental interventions can complement traditional treatment-based control practices.
Climate change and emerging drug resistance make the control of many infectious diseases increasingly challenging and diminish the exclusive reliance on drug treatment as sole solution to the problem. As disease transmission often depends on environmental conditions that can be modified, such modifications may become crucial to risk reduction if we can assess their potential benefit at policy-relevant scales. However, so far, the value of environmental management for this purpose has received little attention. Here, using the parasitic disease of fasciolosis in livestock in the UK as a case study, we demonstrate how mechanistic hydro-epidemiological modelling can be applied to understand disease risk drivers and the efficacy of environmental management across a large heterogeneous domain. Our results show how weather and other environmental characteristics interact to define disease transmission potential and reveal that environmental interventions such as risk avoidance management strategies can provide a valuable alternative or complement to current treatment-based control practice.

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