期刊
PHILOSOPHICAL TRANSACTIONS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES
卷 376, 期 1837, 页码 -出版社
ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rstb.2020.0535
关键词
zoonosis; outbreak; macroecology; transmission mode; virus; bacteria
类别
资金
- NSF [DEB 1316223]
- NIH [R01Al156866]
- UGA President's Interdisciplinary Seed Grant Programme
Zoonotic disease outbreaks pose a significant threat to human health, with various factors contributing to their increasing frequency. Large outbreaks are associated with multiple drivers, including changes in the environment and demographics, with pathogens more likely to be viral and vector-borne. Understanding the characteristics of large outbreaks can provide insights for better surveillance and prevention strategies for zoonotic diseases.
Zoonotic disease outbreaks are an important threat to human health and numerous drivers have been recognized as contributing to their increasing frequency. Identifying and quantifying relationships between drivers of zoonotic disease outbreaks and outbreak severity is critical to developing targeted zoonotic disease surveillance and outbreak prevention strategies. However, quantitative studies of outbreak drivers on a global scale are lacking. Attributes of countries such as press freedom, surveillance capabilities and latitude also bias global outbreak data. To illustrate these issues, we review the characteristics of the 100 largest outbreaks in a global dataset (n = 4463 bacterial and viral zoonotic outbreaks), and compare them with 200 randomly chosen background controls. Large outbreaks tended to have more drivers than background outbreaks and were related to large-scale environmental and demographic factors such as changes in vector abundance, human population density, unusual weather conditions and water contamination. Pathogens of large outbreaks were more likely to be viral and vector-borne than background outbreaks. Overall, our case study shows that the characteristics of large zoonotic outbreaks with thousands to millions of cases differ consistently from those of more typical outbreaks. We also discuss the limitations of our work, hoping to pave the way for more comprehensive future studies. This article is part of the theme issue 'Infectious disease macroecology: parasite diversity and dynamics across the globe'.
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