| Literature DB >> 15238283 |
Jonathan A Patz1, Peter Daszak, Gary M Tabor, A Alonso Aguirre, Mary Pearl, Jon Epstein, Nathan D Wolfe, A Marm Kilpatrick, Johannes Foufopoulos, David Molyneux, David J Bradley.
Abstract
Anthropogenic land use changes drive a range of infectious disease outbreaks and emergence events and modify the transmission of endemic infections. These drivers include agricultural encroachment, deforestation, road construction, dam building, irrigation, wetland modification, mining, the concentration or expansion of urban environments, coastal zone degradation, and other activities. These changes in turn cause a cascade of factors that exacerbate infectious disease emergence, such as forest fragmentation, disease introduction, pollution, poverty, and human migration. The Working Group on Land Use Change and Disease Emergence grew out of a special colloquium that convened international experts in infectious diseases, ecology, and environmental health to assess the current state of knowledge and to develop recommendations for addressing these environmental health challenges. The group established a systems model approach and priority lists of infectious diseases affected by ecologic degradation. Policy-relevant levels of the model include specific health risk factors, landscape or habitat change, and institutional (economic and behavioral) levels. The group recommended creating Centers of Excellence in Ecology and Health Research and Training, based at regional universities and/or research institutes with close links to the surrounding communities. The centers' objectives would be 3-fold: a) to provide information to local communities about the links between environmental change and public health; b) to facilitate fully interdisciplinary research from a variety of natural, social, and health sciences and train professionals who can conduct interdisciplinary research; and c) to engage in science-based communication and assessment for policy making toward sustainable health and ecosystems.Entities:
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Year: 2004 PMID: 15238283 PMCID: PMC1247383 DOI: 10.1289/ehp.6877
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Health Perspect ISSN: 0091-6765 Impact factor: 9.031
Agents and infectious diseases with suspected or known links to landscape change.
| Vector-borne and/or zoonotic | Soil | Water | Human | Other |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Malaria | Melioidosis | Schistosomiasis | Asthma | Hemorrhagic fevers |
| Dengue | Anthrax | Cholera | Tuberculosis | Foot and mouth |
| Lyme disease | Hookworm | Shigellosis | Influenza | Rice blast |
| Yellow fever | Coccidioidomycosis | Rotavirus | Triachoma | |
| Rift Valley fever | Salmonellosis | |||
| Japanese encephalitis | Leptospirosis | |||
| Onchocerciasis | Cryptosporidiosis | |||
| Trypanosomiasis | ||||
| Plague | ||||
| Filariasis | ||||
| Meningitis | ||||
| Rabies | ||||
| Leishmaniasis | ||||
| Kyasanur Forest fever | ||||
| Hantavirus | ||||
| Nipah virus |
Those with the strongest evidence for a link with land use.
Figure 1A systems model of land use change that affects public health. This model shows relationships between drivers of land use change and subsequent levels of environmental change and health consequences. Various levels of investigation and intervention are evident and range from specific risks factors and determinants of population vulnerability to larger institutional and economic activity.
Figure 2The main elements converging under the Consortium for Conservation Medicine. Conservation medicine combines conservation biology, wildlife veterinary medicine, and public health. Adapted from Tabor (2002).