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Agriculture Report - When Animals Make People Sick
This is the VOA Special English Agriculture Report.
Researchers estimate that more than two billion people a year get diseases spread by animals. More than two million of them die.
Delia Grace is a veterinary epidemiologist -- an expert in the spread of diseases involving animals. She is also a food safety expert. She works at the International Livestock1 Research Institute in Nairobi, Kenya. She explains that diseases transmitted between animals and people are called zoonoses.
DELIA GRACE: "A majority of human diseases are actually zoonotic. More than sixty percent of human diseases are transmitted from other vertebrate animals. Some of these diseases are pretty common. Some of the food-borne diseases and also diseases such as tuberculosis2, leptospirosis are not uncommon3. Others are quite rare."
Delia Grace says there are many different infection pathways for a person. Probably the most common one is for people to get sick from food. Other transmission pathways include direct contact with animals. And some diseases can be transmitted through water or through the air.
DELIA GRACE: "Diseases like avian influenza4 or mad cow disease have actually killed very few people. But they are of interest because some of them have the potential to kill a lot of people -- diseases like the Spanish flu after the First World War or HIV/AIDS, both of which were originally zoonoses."
Health workers killed 17,000 chickens at a poultry5 market in Hong Kong in December after officials said a dead chicken tested positive for the deadly H5N1 avian influenza virus
Delia Grace is the lead author of a new report called "Mapping of Poverty and Likely Zoonoses Hotspots." She points out that poverty and disease are closely linked, so preventing the transmission of animal diseases could help reduce poverty.
The report, for Britain's Department for International Development, lists places where the diseases are most common. The report lists places where a disease has existed for a long time, a so-called endemic zoonosis, as well as places with new threats.
DELIA GRACE: "So in terms of the hotspots of the zoonosis which are there all the time -- not the new zoonosis, but what we call the endemic zoonosis -- we identified three countries which bear the greatest burden of these diseases. And those are India, Ethiopia and Nigeria. But in terms of the new diseases -- the diseases which haven't been there, but are emerging -- the hotspots are very different. They appear to be western United States and western Europe."
Delia Grace says things could get worse in the coming years as meat production increases to feed a growing world population. High production farms often raise animals close together. Crowding can allow diseases to spread quickly. Another concern is the use of antibiotics6 in food animals, not only to prevent and treat diseases but to increase growth.
The report says an "incentive-based" system to encourage safer methods of raising animals could be more effective than increasing food inspections7. For example, small farmers could receive training and other help that would lead to official certification that their products are safe.
And that's the VOA Special English Agriculture Report. I'm Jim Tedder8.
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Contributing: Joe De Capua
1 livestock | |
n.家畜,牲畜 | |
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2 tuberculosis | |
n.结核病,肺结核 | |
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3 uncommon | |
adj.罕见的,非凡的,不平常的 | |
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4 influenza | |
n.流行性感冒,流感 | |
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5 poultry | |
n.家禽,禽肉 | |
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6 antibiotics | |
n.(用作复数)抗生素;(用作单数)抗生物质的研究;抗生素,抗菌素( antibiotic的名词复数 ) | |
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7 inspections | |
n.检查( inspection的名词复数 );检验;视察;检阅 | |
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8 tedder | |
n.(干草)翻晒者,翻晒机 | |
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