Dubai Telegraph - The age of outbreaks: Experts warn of more animal disease threats

EUR -
AED 4.396886
AFN 77.821135
ALL 96.739404
AMD 453.819407
ANG 2.143167
AOA 1097.874661
ARS 1729.321461
AUD 1.695324
AWG 2.15654
AZN 2.03542
BAM 1.957601
BBD 2.41273
BDT 146.384673
BGN 2.01062
BHD 0.451351
BIF 3548.509072
BMD 1.197246
BND 1.51161
BOB 8.277615
BRL 6.226517
BSD 1.197907
BTN 110.03369
BWP 15.67442
BYN 3.406048
BYR 23466.030653
BZD 2.409227
CAD 1.619689
CDF 2681.832321
CHF 0.917713
CLF 0.026165
CLP 1033.15161
CNY 8.326431
CNH 8.310776
COP 4394.325524
CRC 594.556922
CUC 1.197246
CUP 31.727031
CVE 110.366998
CZK 24.300691
DJF 213.315358
DKK 7.466951
DOP 75.3706
DZD 154.574046
EGP 56.132778
ERN 17.958697
ETB 186.269767
FJD 2.621611
FKP 0.868723
GBP 0.866238
GEL 3.226556
GGP 0.868723
GHS 13.093046
GIP 0.868723
GMD 87.399158
GNF 10511.802516
GTQ 9.190494
GYD 250.62057
HKD 9.345166
HNL 31.613084
HRK 7.538577
HTG 156.874324
HUF 380.938082
IDR 20069.442441
ILS 3.696379
IMP 0.868723
INR 110.069512
IQD 1569.250257
IRR 50434.007396
ISK 144.807234
JEP 0.868723
JMD 187.782759
JOD 0.848777
JPY 183.496579
KES 154.444806
KGS 104.699264
KHR 4815.490564
KMF 493.265807
KPW 1077.602206
KRW 1714.086027
KWD 0.366885
KYD 0.998323
KZT 603.567801
LAK 25807.850899
LBP 107272.538299
LKR 370.932806
LRD 221.61481
LSL 19.047503
LTL 3.535158
LVL 0.724203
LYD 7.52289
MAD 10.831065
MDL 20.088565
MGA 5344.917302
MKD 61.642026
MMK 2514.711856
MNT 4270.44921
MOP 9.627097
MRU 47.820794
MUR 54.055673
MVR 18.509078
MWK 2077.211026
MXN 20.494368
MYR 4.70219
MZN 76.336127
NAD 19.047503
NGN 1671.823186
NIO 44.081107
NOK 11.470578
NPR 176.053704
NZD 1.973325
OMR 0.460349
PAB 1.197902
PEN 4.008188
PGK 5.127782
PHP 70.613817
PKR 335.114504
PLN 4.204741
PYG 8044.36719
QAR 4.355525
RON 5.095717
RSD 117.39961
RUB 91.077876
RWF 1747.707884
SAR 4.490562
SBD 9.670969
SCR 16.84395
SDG 720.143366
SEK 10.58713
SGD 1.51235
SHP 0.898245
SLE 29.095958
SLL 25105.658805
SOS 683.428752
SRD 45.605454
STD 24780.58453
STN 24.522868
SVC 10.481687
SYP 13241.036913
SZL 19.039596
THB 37.324106
TJS 11.194446
TMT 4.190363
TND 3.425866
TOP 2.882682
TRY 51.989945
TTD 8.130514
TWD 37.546247
TZS 3064.950714
UAH 51.205809
UGX 4288.945813
USD 1.197246
UYU 45.331894
UZS 14493.394392
VES 429.184302
VND 31139.781851
VUV 143.153591
WST 3.252692
XAF 656.561033
XAG 0.010245
XAU 0.000217
XCD 3.235618
XCG 2.158895
XDR 0.816551
XOF 656.558289
XPF 119.331742
YER 285.419628
ZAR 18.814872
ZMK 10776.646662
ZMW 23.808003
ZWL 385.512872
  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    82.4

    0%

  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • CMSC

    -0.1000

    23.7

    -0.42%

  • RELX

    -0.9800

    37.38

    -2.62%

  • GSK

    -0.7000

    50.1

    -1.4%

  • RIO

    0.4600

    93.37

    +0.49%

  • BTI

    -0.1800

    60.16

    -0.3%

  • AZN

    -2.3800

    93.22

    -2.55%

  • RYCEF

    -0.5500

    16.6

    -3.31%

  • BCE

    -0.2500

    25.27

    -0.99%

  • NGG

    0.3700

    84.68

    +0.44%

  • BP

    0.0800

    37.7

    +0.21%

  • VOD

    0.0700

    14.57

    +0.48%

  • BCC

    -0.8900

    80.85

    -1.1%

  • JRI

    -0.6900

    12.99

    -5.31%

  • CMSD

    -0.0457

    24.0508

    -0.19%

The age of outbreaks: Experts warn of more animal disease threats
The age of outbreaks: Experts warn of more animal disease threats / Photo: Freek van den Bergh - ANP/AFP/File

The age of outbreaks: Experts warn of more animal disease threats

With the spread of monkeypox across the world coming hot on the heels of Covid-19, there are fears that increasing outbreaks of diseases that jump from animals to humans could spark another pandemic.

Text size:

While such diseases -- called zoonoses -- have been around for millennia, they have become more common in recent decades due to deforestation, mass livestock cultivation, climate change and other human-induced upheavals of the animal world, experts say.

Other diseases to leap from animals to humans include HIV, Ebola, Zika, SARS, MERS, bird flu and the bubonic plague.

The World Health Organization said on Thursday that it is still investigating the origins of Covid, but the "strongest evidence is still around zoonotic transmission".

And with more than 1,000 monkeypox cases recorded globally over the last month, the UN agency has warned there is a "real" risk the disease could become established in dozens of countries.

The WHO's emergencies director Michael Ryan said last week that "it's not just in monkeypox" -- the way that humans and animals interact has become "unstable".

"The number of times that these diseases cross into humans is increasing and then our ability to amplify that disease and move it on within our communities is increasing," he said.

Monkeypox did not recently leap over to humans -- the first human case was identified in DR Congo in 1970 and it has since been confined to areas in Central and Western Africa.

Despite its name, "the latest monkeypox outbreak has nothing to do with monkeys," said Olivier Restif, epidemiologist at the University of Cambridge.

While it was first discovered in macaques, "zoonotic transmission is most often from rodents, and outbreaks spread by person-to-person contact," he told AFP.

- Worse yet to come? -

Around 60 percent of all known human infections are zoonotic, as are 75 percent of all new and emerging infectious diseases, according to the UN Environment Programme.

Restif said the number of zoonotic pathogens and outbreaks have increased in the past few decades due to "population growth, livestock growth and encroachment into wildlife habitats".

"Wild animals have drastically changed their behaviours in response to human activities, migrating from their depleted habitats," he said.

"Animals with weakened immune systems hanging around near people and domestic animals is a sure way of getting more pathogen transmission."

Benjamin Roche, a specialist in zoonoses at France's Institute of Research for Development, said that deforestation has had a major effect.

"Deforestation reduces biodiversity: we lose animals that naturally regulate viruses, which allows them to spread more easily," he told AFP.

And worse may be to come, with a major study published earlier this year warning that climate change is ramping the risk of another pandemic.

As animals flee their warming natural habitats they will meet other species for the first time -- potentially infecting them with some of the 10,000 zoonotic viruses believed to be "circulating silently" among wild mammals, mostly in tropical forests, the study said.

Greg Albery, a disease ecologist at Georgetown University who co-authored the study, told AFP that "the host-pathogen network is about to change substantially".

- 'We have to be ready' -

"We need improved surveillance both in urban and wild animals so that we can identify when a pathogen has jumped from one species to another -- and if the receiving host is urban or in close proximity to humans, we should get particularly concerned," he said.

Eric Fevre, a specialist in infectious diseases at Britain's University of Liverpool and the International Livestock Research Institute in Kenya, said that "a whole range of new, potentially dangerous diseases could emerge -- we have to be ready".

This includes "focusing the public health of populations" in remote environments and "better studying the ecology of these natural areas to understand how different species interact".

Restif said that there is "no silver bullet -- our best bet is to act at all levels to reduce the risk".

"We need huge investment in frontline healthcare provision and testing capacity for deprived communities around the world, so that outbreaks can be detected, identified and controlled without delays," he said.

On Thursday, a WHO scientific advisory group released a preliminary report outlining what needs to be done when a new zoonotic pathogen emerges.

It lists a range of early investigations into how and where the pathogen jumped to humans, determining the potential risk, as well as longer-term environmental impacts.

J.Alaqanone--DT