| Literature DB >> 30727964 |
David S Thaler1, Michael G Head2, Andrew Horsley3.
Abstract
Antimicrobial resistance continues to outpace the development of new chemotherapeutics. Novel pathogens continue to evolve and emerge. Public health innovation has the potential to open a new front in the war of "our wits against their genes" (Joshua Lederberg). Dense sampling coupled to next generation sequencing can increase the spatial and temporal resolution of microbial characterization while sensor technologies precisely map physical parameters relevant to microbial survival and spread. Microbial, physical, and epidemiological big data could be combined to improve prospective risk identification. However, applied in the wrong way, these approaches may not realize their maximum potential benefits and could even do harm. Minimizing microbial-human interactions would be a mistake. There is evidence that microbes previously thought of at best "benign" may actually enhance human health. Benign and health-promoting microbiomes may, or may not, spread via mechanisms similar to pathogens. Infectious vaccines are approaching readiness to make enhanced contributions to herd immunity. The rigorously defined nature of infectious vaccines contrasts with indigenous "benign or health-promoting microbiomes" but they may converge. A "microbial Neolithic revolution" is a possible future in which human microbial-associations are understood and managed analogously to the macro-agriculture of plants and animals. Tradeoffs need to be framed in order to understand health-promoting potentials of benign, and/or health-promoting microbiomes and infectious vaccines while also discouraging pathogens. Super-spreaders are currently defined as individuals who play an outsized role in the contagion of infectious disease. A key unanswered question is whether the super-spreader concept may apply similarly to health-promoting microbes. The complex interactions of individual rights, community health, pathogen contagion, the spread of benign, and of health-promoting microbiomes including infectious vaccines require study. Advancing the detailed understanding of heterogeneity in microbial spread is very likely to yield important insights relevant to public health.Entities:
Keywords: Bioethics; Epidemiology; Healthy buildings; Infectious disease; Infectious vaccines; Microbiome; Precision medicine; Precision public health; Public health; Vaccines
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30727964 PMCID: PMC6364421 DOI: 10.1186/s12879-019-3715-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Infect Dis ISSN: 1471-2334 Impact factor: 3.090
Fig. 1Crude death rate for infectious diseases – United States, 1900–1996 (adapted by the CDC from [112]). Mortality from infectious diseases began to decrease before the advent of antimicrobials. The slope of decrease in crude mortality does not show evidence of being affected by the introduction of antimicrobials. The first clinical use of sulfonamids was in 1935, penicillin in 1943, with others throughout the following decades, albeit with decreasing frequency of novel compounds. The 1918 spike in mortality was caused by the Spanish flu pandemic which is estimated to have infected 500 million people, one third of the world’s population at that time, and killed between twenty and fifty million people
Typhoid Mary and Minority Report
| The premise of “Minority Report” (a dystopian science fiction story by Phillip K. Dick (1956), made into a film (2002) and a television series (2015)) is “predictive policing” that allows authorities to forecast who will commit a crime. The “pre-offender” is preventatively detained or killed before any crime has actually taken place. Mary Mallon, better known as “Typhoid Mary” was an asymptomatic carrier of the typhoid fever bacillus whose unfortunate choice of occupation was to be a cook. Epidemiologists tracked her down, but she escaped surveillance, changed her name and again took up the only trade she knew. Repeatedly located by investigators who tracked down the shared source of multiple infections, she was eventually confined against her will with no prospect of release [ |