We’d hoped to find a unifying theme, and instead there’s just 45 more questions that need to be answered.” Zoonotic diseases are not, for example, concentrated in tropical environments, as might be ...
Global risks of zoonotic disease are high on policy agendas. Increasingly, Africa is seen as a ‘hotspot’, with likely disease spillovers from animals to humans. This paper explores the social dynamics ...
When the natural environment is stretched beyond its ability to meet basic human needs for food, clean air, drinkable water and shelter, it is not just a humanitarian concern for the world community.
Wild animals thrive better in the wild where they have plenty of natural habitat with FWP noting it’s safer for humans to ...
and Monkeypox virus are notable examples of emerging zoonotic pathogens. Among zoonotic diseases associated with birds, avian influenza is the most important zoonotic infection. Wild birds have ...
The One Health philosophy is described by WHO as ‘an integrated, unifying approach that aims to sustainably balance and ...
Notable examples include zoonotic diseases such as COVID-19, avian influenza, mpox, and Ebola, which can have widespread impacts. With this framework, federal agencies are enhancing collaboration ...
For example, the U.S. 2003 monkeypox outbreak occurred because our nation imported small mammals that spread the disease to pets, which then infected their owners. Preventing the next zoonotic ...
The challenge of a zoonotic disease turning into a pandemic is that, on first sight, the paradigm of learning from examples seems to fall apart. We don’t have years of observations to teach a machine, ...
In the wake of increasing cases of zoonotic diseases, the Union Animal Husbandry Ministry provided a one-day online training to about one lakh women farmers engaged in livestock farming on Friday ...