A MYSTERIOUS disease. Never Seen in the West. Doctors Baffled.
A number of such headlines have appeared since West Nile virus surfaced in
the summer of 1999 in the US.
Sporadic cases of bubonic plague have been reported in New York City and mad
cow disease in Britain. The Asian outbreak of severe acute respiratory syndrome
became public in March and, earlier this month, monkeypox announced its foray
into the Western Hemisphere specifically, the US Midwest.
Revenge of the animals...mad cow disease from cows is only a small part of
the threat posed by diseases jumping from animals to humans.
What these diseases have in common is transmission into the human population
through contact with animals a process termed zoonosis.
Every so often there is a species jump, when an infection one weve never
heard of or never described in the literature makes a leap from one animal to
another, said Dr Dan Shapiro, a specialist in infectious diseases and an
associate professor at Boston University School of Medicine, who is writing a
book on zoonosis. If the second animal is human, that can be a problem.
US federal health officials took quick action to stem the spread of
monkeypox, banning the sale of domestic prairie dogs as well as six types of
rodents imported from Africa animals sold in response to Americans taste for
exotic pets. Dozens of Midwesterners had fallen ill after handling pet prairie
dogs apparently infected when housed near the rodents.
Zoonotic diseases are not a new phenomenon; animals have been known to
transmit a long list of illnesses, including rabies, scabies, salmonella,
trichinosis, botulism, malaria, measles, yellow fever, hantavirus and a number
of strains of both streptococcus and influenza. Even the pandemic of Spanish
influenza that killed an estimated 20 million people in 1918 is believed to have
originated in swine.
What is potentially unique about monkeypox, and what has caught peoples
attention, is that monkeypox has not been introduced to the Western Hemisphere
before, said Dr Robert Kim-Farley, visiting professor of epidemiology at the
University of California, Los Angeles School of Public Health.
But experts say its hard to determine if the number of such diseases
crossing the species barrier to humans has been rising in recent years. What is
known is that increasing urbanisation worldwide, encroachment on previously
uninhabited forest and desert land and a mobile human population traversing
oceans at jet speed provide ample opportunities for diseases to emerge or
re-emerge, occasionally in more virulent forms just about anywhere.
People are increasingly encroaching on to out-of-the-way places, said Dr
Stephen Morse, director of public health preparedness at the Mailman School of
Public Health of Columbia University. Deforestation provides more contact with
forest creatures. As more land is being given over to agriculture, and theres a
higher density of both animals and human beings, that puts them in contact with
obscure infections that were sequestered.
And the speed of global travel heightens the potential.
An animal can, within 24 hours, go from the jungle in the Congo to someones
bedroom in the United States, Kim-Farley said. You just never saw that before.
If they had been shipped by sea, they would have either no longer been
contagious by the time they arrived, or have died, he said.
Some epidemiologists do believe zoonotic diseases are on the rise, but they
say theres no cause for alarm because scientists today are adept at tracing new
infections and eager to follow the trail.
The conditions that favour these transfers into human populations continue
to increase, Morse said.
The leap between species can be made a number of ways: by consuming diseased
meat, being bitten by mosquitoes or fleas, handling a pet or having contact with
animal products like blood, hides, fur or wool, or dairy products, experts say.
Britons were infected with the human version of mad cow disease by eating
beef containing the microscopic protein particle that causes the disease. And
health officials believe food handlers in China may have become infected with
the SARS virus after handling animals at a market that supplied restaurants in
Guangdong.
In the United States, the growing popularity of exotic pets led to a chain of
monkeypox infection that is believed to have started when the prairie dogs were
housed with imported animals that carry the illness. US health officials said
six types of rodents have been implicated in the monkeypox outbreak in humans:
the giant Gambian rat, tree squirrel, rope squirrel, brush-tailed porcupine,
striped mouse and dormouse. All African rodents have been banned for sale and
import, and it is illegal to release them to the wild.
This is not the first time federal health officials have taken the bold
action of banning pets. In 1975, federal officials banned the miniature pet
turtles kids used to win at street fairs when it became known they were the
source of 14% of all human salmonellosis cases in the country.
The same year, officials also banned imported monkeys and other non-human
primates as pets because they carry serious diseases like tuberculosis.
The problem with zoonotic diseases is two-fold, experts say. Once an animal
population harbours a virus, it is virtually impossible to eradicate the
disease. Thats why public health officials have urged pet owners not to let
prairie dogs or rodents free.
The second factor is how efficiently a new disease is transmitted among
humans. HIV, for example, is transmitted very efficiently through sex, and its
virulence doesnt weaken as it is transmitted time after time. LAT-WP
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"A foolish faith in authority is the worst enemy of truth."
-- Albert Einstein, letter to a friend, 1901
"I know of no safe depository of the ultimate powers of the society but the people themselves, and if we think them not enlightened enough to exercise control with a wholesome discretion, the remedy is not to take it from them, but to inform their discretion by education."
-- Thomas Jefferson, letter to William C. Jarvis, September 28, 1820
"What's the point of vaccination if it doesn't protect you from the unvaccinated?"
-- Sandy Gottstein
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