Editor's Summary
17 May 2007
The ascent of pathogens
This week's Review Article tackles the question of the evolution of human pathogens. Analysis of what we know of the origins of 10 tropical and 15 temperate infectious diseases reveals that animals were the source of the majority of important human diseases in the recent past, and that direct contact with animals through activities such as hunting remains a major route for disease acquisition. Modern developments such as industrial food production, vaccine production and blood transfusion may be making us more vulnerable than ever to new pathogens. The authors argue that people with high exposure to wild animals, such as hunters, zoo workers and wildlife veterinarians, should be regularly screened for emergent pathogens.This would provide early warning of newly introduced disease, and supply a repository of tissue samples that would assist in reconstructing the origin of later outbreaks.
Review: Origins of major human infectious diseases
Nathan D. Wolfe, Claire Panosian Dunavan & Jared Diamond
doi:10.1038/nature05775
First paragraph | Full Text | PDF (221K) | Supplementary information

