Mitigating Climate Change’s Impact on Tick-Borne Zoonotic Disease Emergence

C. Philson, L. Gray, Lindsey Pedroncelli, William Ota
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Abstract

Disease transmission from animals to humans — called a zoonotic disease — is responsible for nearly 60% of emerging infectious diseases. While zoonotic diseases already pose a major risk to humanity, global climate change and its causal human behaviors are compounding zoonotic disease risk. Dynamic species distributions, increased species overlap, and alterations in human land use increase the risk of disease transmission from non-humans to humans. Ticks, which carry many human disease-causing agents, are a primary example. As 23% of emerging infectious diseases globally are spread by blood-feeding arthropods, such as ticks, managing and monitoring tick distributions and their overlap and potential contact with humans is vital to decrease the risk of zoonotic disease transmission. While some programs are already in place, expanding current and implementing new programs across the globe is pertinent. We propose enhancing international collaboration and communication efforts through intergovernmental organizations such as the United Nations (UN) and the World Health Organization (WHO), to better research, monitor, and mitigate the risk of tick-borne zoonotic disease. By focusing international efforts on ticks, subsequent zoonotic disease-climate change research and monitoring efforts can be done across species.
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缓解气候变化对蜱传人畜共患病的影响
从动物到人类的疾病传播——称为人畜共患疾病——导致了近60%的新发传染病。虽然人畜共患疾病已经对人类构成重大威胁,但全球气候变化及其导致的人类行为正在加剧人畜共患疾病的风险。动态的物种分布、物种重叠的增加以及人类土地利用的改变增加了疾病从非人类向人类传播的风险。携带许多人类致病因子的蜱虫就是一个主要的例子。由于全球23%的新发传染病是通过蜱虫等吸血节肢动物传播的,因此管理和监测蜱虫分布及其与人类的重叠和潜在接触对于降低人畜共患疾病传播的风险至关重要。虽然一些项目已经到位,但在全球范围内扩大现有项目并实施新的项目是有意义的。我们建议通过联合国和世界卫生组织等政府间组织加强国际合作与沟通,以更好地研究、监测和减轻蜱传人畜共患疾病的风险。通过将国际努力集中在蜱虫上,随后的人畜共患疾病——气候变化研究和监测工作可以跨物种进行。
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