| Literature DB >> 23399790 |
Karsten Hueffer1, Alan J Parkinson, Robert Gerlach, James Berner.
Abstract
Over the last 60 years, Alaska's mean annual temperature has increased by 1.6°C, more than twice the rate of the rest of the United States. As a result, climate change impacts are more pronounced here than in other regions of the United States. Warmer temperatures may allow some infected host animals to survive winters in larger numbers, increase their population and expand their range of habitation thus increasing the opportunity for transmission of infection to humans. Subsistence hunting and gathering activities may place rural residents of Alaska at a greater risk of acquiring zoonotic infections than urban residents. Known zoonotic diseases that occur in Alaska include brucellosis, toxoplasmosis, trichinellosis, giardiasis/cryptosporidiosis, echinococcosis, rabies and tularemia. Actions for early disease detection, research and prevention and control include: (1) determining baseline levels of infection and disease in both humans and host animals; (2) conducting more research to understand the ecology of infection in the Arctic environment; (3) improving active and passive surveillance systems for infection and disease in humans and animals; (4) improving outreach, education and communication on climate-sensitive infectious diseases at the community, health and animal care provider levels; and (5) improving coordination between public health and animal health agencies, universities and tribal health organisations.Entities:
Keywords: US Arctic; Zoonotic infections; climate change; gaps in knowledge; recommendations
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23399790 PMCID: PMC3568173 DOI: 10.3402/ijch.v72i0.19562
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Circumpolar Health ISSN: 1239-9736 Impact factor: 1.228
Common gaps in knowledge among pathogens, recommendations for actions and technology needed to address prevention and control of these zoonotic threats in the context of a changing Alaskan climate.
| Agent | Gaps | Actions Needed | Technology Needed |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| Recent baseline levels of infection and disease in humans and wildlife unknown. | Conduct seroprevalence studies in humans and wildlife. |
|
| Role of marine | Surveillance for disease in humans and wildlife. | Marine | |
|
| Recent baseline levels of infection and disease in humans and wildlife unknown. Not a notifiable disease. | Conduct seroprevalence studies in humans and wildlife. | Development/validation of field filter paper blood collection systems for antibody detection. |
| Role of predator prey cycles as a mechanism of maintenance in Arctic regions. | |||
|
| Recent baseline levels of infection and disease in humans and wildlife unknown. | Conduct seroprevalence studies in humans and wildlife. | Development/validation of field filter paper blood collection systems for antibody detection. Animal species specific antibody assays. |
|
| Recent baseline levels of infection and disease in humans and wildlife unknown (Underreported). | Evaluate surveillance systems in humans and wildlife. | Development/validation of serological tests. |
| Significance of molecular variation of strains and relationship to disease in humans and wildlife. | |||
|
| Recent baseline levels of infection and disease in humans and wildlife unknown. | Evaluate surveillance systems in humans and wildlife. | Development/validation of |
| Significance of molecular variation of strains and relationship to disease in humans and wildlife. | |||
| Status of dog treatment programmes unknown. | Assessment of dog treatment programmes. | ||
|
| Prevalence in wildlife reservoirs unknown. | Evaluation of Direct Immunohistochemical Test (DRIT). | |
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| Recent baseline levels of infection and disease in humans and wildlife unknown. | Evaluate surveillance systems in humans and wildlife. | |
|
| Inconsistent disease awareness and potential role of climate change at community, tribal, health organisation levels. | Provide necessary education, outreach and communication. | |
| Inconsistent communication, collaboration between subject matter experts at federal, non-federal agencies, institutes and organisations. | Convene a working group to provide communication, monitor activities, actions needed and progress. |