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DFID Takes Lead Role In Combating Spread Of Animal - Human Diseases

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  • DFID Takes Lead Role In Combating Spread Of Animal - Human Diseases

    DFID is tomorrow bringing together vets, virologists, academics and other experts in animal-to-human diseases in order to identify hotspots where the next global pandemic is most likely to come from and how best to prevent it emerging or spreading.

    Over sixty per cent of diseases that affect humans are of animal origin, including bird flu, swine flu and ebola, as well as more established diseases like rabies and tuberculosis. Experts are predicting that the next global pandemic will be a disease of this type.

    The risk from new and existing animal-to-human diseases is increased by recent global changes including:

    * increasing demand for livestock and a shift in livestock production to countries where people and animals live more closely together;

    * rapid growth in tourism and cheaper global travel;

    * the impact of climate change, which means that disease-carrying insects like Tsetse flies and midges can move into newly warm areas;

    * other changes affecting local conditions, including alterations to trade, temperature, humidity, livestock markets, and other social and environmental factors.

    In response to these developing risks, tomorrow?s event will look to identify the most likely hotspots around the world for the emergence of new animal-to-human diseases ? known as zoonoses - and examine how best to address them. Experts will identify countries and regions where the combination of risk factors creates likely hotspots, and will make these findings available to decision makers in the international community, NGOs and country governments to help them decide where and how to focus their resources to minimise these risks.

    International Development Minister Mike Foster said:

    ?Our worst fears haven?t yet come true, but all the experts agree that there?s a clear and immediate risk that the next animal-to-human disease to emerge will cause death on a massive scale. Such a pandemic would disrupt social order, strain economies, and rapidly overwhelm national health care systems, with devastating effects on human health.

    ?This event is an important step in determining where the next pandemic is most likely to come from in order to provide the information decision makers need if they are to stop these diseases from emerging in the first place, or from spreading if they do emerge.?



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    "The next major advancement in the health of American people will be determined by what the individual is willing to do for himself"-- John Knowles, Former President of the Rockefeller Foundation
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