| Literature DB >> 27486741 |
Lesley Bennett1, Grant Waterer2.
Abstract
New viral respiratory pathogens are emerging with increasing frequency and have potentially devastating impacts on the population worldwide. Recent examples of newly emerged threats include severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus, the 2009 H1N1 influenza pandemic, and Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus. Experiences with these pathogens have shown up major deficiencies in how we deal globally with emerging pathogens and taught us salient lessons in what needs to be addressed for future pandemics. This article reviews the lessons learnt from past experience and current knowledge on the range of measures required to limit the impact of emerging respiratory infections from public health responses down to individual patient management. Key areas of interest are surveillance programs, political limitations on our ability to respond quickly enough to emerging threats, media management, public information dissemination, infection control, prophylaxis, and individual patient management. Respiratory physicians have a crucial role to play in many of these areas and need to be aware of how to respond as new viral pathogens emerge. Thieme Medical Publishers 333 Seventh Avenue, New York, NY 10001, USA.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27486741 PMCID: PMC7171718 DOI: 10.1055/s-0036-1584792
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Semin Respir Crit Care Med ISSN: 1069-3424 Impact factor: 3.119
Recent emergent respiratory viruses, sources, and transmission patterns
| Date | Infection | Region | Potential source | Transmission |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1997 | H5N1 | Hong Kong | Poultry environment | Contact with infected poultry, close contact human to human |
| 1999 | H9N2 | Hong Kong | Poultry (quail) | Direct infection from live poultry |
| 2003 | SARS-CoV | Hong Kong | Bats | Human to human, sporadic |
| 2004 | H7N7 | The Netherlands | Dutch poultry farms | Direct infection from live poultry |
| 2005 | H3N2 | Canada | Pig, pig farms, turkeys, and swine farm worker | Contact with infected pigs, limited nonsustainable human-to-human spread |
| 2009 | H1N1 | Mexico | Not clear, virus most similar to influenza viruses found in pigs | Human to human |
| 2012 | MERS-CoV | Saudi Arabia | Camels, bats, camel farms, human patients | Close contact human to human, sporadic |
| 2013 | H7N9 | China | Poultry environment (bird markets, poultry farms), human patients | Direct contact with live poultry, close limited human-to-human spread |