TY - JOUR
T1 - High time for an efficient and effective internationally-supported Zoonosis Surveillance System?
AU - Green, Stephen T.
AU - Cladi, Lorenzo
PY - 2020/5/15
Y1 - 2020/5/15
N2 - Uncannily prophetically, while speaking at the 23rd Forum on Global Issues in 2009, Dr Margaret
Chan of the World Health Organisation (WHO) said “Surveillance for emerging diseases contributes
to global security. If basic surveillance and laboratory capacities are compromised, will health
authorities catch the next SARS (severe acute respiratory syndrome), or spot the emergence of a
pandemic virus in time to warn the world and mitigate the damage?”2
COVID-19 is of course a zoonosis, and the current desperate and damaging international situation
makes it clear that a redoubling of international efforts on on-going surveillance for potential new
emerging zoonoses remains vital. In fact since 1980 we have seen - among others – HIV-1, HIV-2,
new variant Creutzfeld-Jacob Disease, avian influenza, swine influenza, SARS-1, Nipah virus, Sin
Nombre virus, monkey pox, and MERS-CoV emerge out of animal populations and cause serious and
even lethal human disease. COVID-19 arguably has already had more serious implications than all of
its predecessors, - with 270,333 deaths recorded worldwide at the time of writing3
- but what comes
after it may be even worse. Put directly, we need to close the stable door before the horse has
bolted.
AB - Uncannily prophetically, while speaking at the 23rd Forum on Global Issues in 2009, Dr Margaret
Chan of the World Health Organisation (WHO) said “Surveillance for emerging diseases contributes
to global security. If basic surveillance and laboratory capacities are compromised, will health
authorities catch the next SARS (severe acute respiratory syndrome), or spot the emergence of a
pandemic virus in time to warn the world and mitigate the damage?”2
COVID-19 is of course a zoonosis, and the current desperate and damaging international situation
makes it clear that a redoubling of international efforts on on-going surveillance for potential new
emerging zoonoses remains vital. In fact since 1980 we have seen - among others – HIV-1, HIV-2,
new variant Creutzfeld-Jacob Disease, avian influenza, swine influenza, SARS-1, Nipah virus, Sin
Nombre virus, monkey pox, and MERS-CoV emerge out of animal populations and cause serious and
even lethal human disease. COVID-19 arguably has already had more serious implications than all of
its predecessors, - with 270,333 deaths recorded worldwide at the time of writing3
- but what comes
after it may be even worse. Put directly, we need to close the stable door before the horse has
bolted.
UR - https://pearl.plymouth.ac.uk/context/sc-research/article/1135/viewcontent/High_20time_20for_20an_20efficient_20and_20effective_20internationally_supported_20Zoonosis_20Surveillance_20System.pdf
U2 - 10.1016/j.jinf.2020.05.015
DO - 10.1016/j.jinf.2020.05.015
M3 - Article
SN - 0163-4453
VL - 0
JO - Journal of Infection
JF - Journal of Infection
IS - 0
ER -