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Climate change could make Indonesia next hot spot of spillover infections

JAKARTA (The Jakarta Post/Asia News Network): On a warming planet, the species-rich ecosystems and large human populations of Indonesia, India and Africa’s Sahel region could turn the regions into hot spots of zoonotic disease as humans come into increasing contact with wildlife, warns an article on increased viral outbreaks published on April 28, 2022 in Nature.

South-africa , Australia , United-states , Indonesia , India , Jakarta , Jakarta-raya , Riris-andono-ahmad , Jatna-supriatna , Joko-widodo , University-of-indonesia , National-commission-for-zoonosis

LISTEN | SA experts don't see need for mass monkeypox vaccination

SA disease experts said on Wednesday they did not see a need for a mass vaccination campaign against monkeypox or believe cases would spread in the same way as Covid-19.

Jacqueline-weyer , Adrian-puren , Centre-for , National-institute-for-communicable-diseases , National-institute , Communicable-diseases , Parasitic-diseases , Monkeypox-vaccination , Need , Disease-experts , Infection , Sa-experts

SA experts don't see need for mass monkeypox vaccination

SA disease experts said on Wednesday they did not see a need for a mass vaccination campaign against monkeypox or believe cases would spread in the same way as Covid-19.

Jacqueline-weyer , Adrian-puren , Centre-for , National-institute-for-communicable-diseases , National-institute , Communicable-diseases , Parasitic-diseases , Monkeypox-vaccination , Need , Disease-experts , Infection , Sa-experts

Anderson Cooper 360

possibly, or smaller animals that could be transmitting this. but much more ebola, we don't know for sure what the natural reservoir of monkeypox is. ebola is probably bats, although they haven't shown that for sure and monkeypox these rodents. it's that contact, that swapping of viruses that happens between animals and humans, these zoonotic jumps. and in certain cases with prolonged contact you can have human-to-human transmission. but as we've seen with covid, we have to be a little humble here in understanding does the virus change? could it become more transmissable in some way? we're not saying that at this point. but when you're dealing with a very large outbreak like this, people who seem to have contracted this disease with no known travel to that part of the world, no known contact with someone who's infected, it's a bit of a sort of medical investigation that is still ongoing now to figure out if

Monkeypox , Animals , Ebola , Reservoir , Bats , Cases , Viruses , Contact , Humans , Swapping , Rodents , Haven-t

Zoonoses And Us: The Fatal Risks Of Our Food Production System

Mass-scale meat production is not only a key agent of environmental destruction but a main culprit in disease generation. We must change the way we eat to avoid the next pandemic.

India , South-korea , Spain , Spanish , One-health , Zoonotic , Ovid-19 , Eat-production , Rance ,

Origins Hunting the Source of...-20211101-01:35:00

origins of this virus? well, the most likely is that it's a zoonotic origin, most likely bats and i think we may need to think about an intermediary animal to explain how it actually got into people. and what evidence are you basing that on? first of all, the genetic evidence. there's one very close relative of it. ratg-13 ratg—13 was found in bats in china in 2013 after six miners got sick. three of them died. researchers from wuhan that studied and officially identified the virus. it's a 96.2% match with sars—cov—2 and closer relatives have been found in bat caves in neighbouring laos in the past few weeks. this is significant because both are the closest known relatives of sars—cov—2 and either, or both, could have changed enough over

Evidence , Virus , Origin , Origins , People , Animal , Bats , Likely , Zoonotic , All , Relative , Ratg

Origins-20211031-17:35:00

you have seen, where are you on the origins of this virus? well, most likely it is of zoonotic origin, most likley bats and i think we may need to think about an intermediary animal to explain how it actually got into people. and what evidence are you basing that on? first of all, the genetic evidence. there is one very close relative of it, ratg13. ratg13 was found in horse—shoe bats in china's southern yunnan province back in 2013 after six miners got sick. three of them died. researchers studied and officially identified the virus. it is a 96.2% match with sars—cov—2, and even closer relatives have been found in bat caves in neighbouring laos in the last few weeks. this is significant because both ratg13 and the more recently identified banal—52 are the closest

Virus , People , Origins , Origin , Animal , Likley-bats , Zoonotic , Evidence , It , All , Bats , Ratg13

Origins-20211030-19:36:00

this is where the first cluster of covid cases seemed to have emerged. professor koopmans and her team visited the market and believe it could be where the virus jumped from animals into humans. to me, just looking at the market and the layout of the market, with many different stalls, with many different types of animals sold there, some of them live and imported from parts of china where we know the bat populations are most prevalent, and have most of these sars—related viruses. so, from the evidence you have seen, where are you on the origins of this virus? well, most likely it is of zoonotic origin, most likley bats and i think we may need to think about an intermediary animal to explain how it actually got into people. and what evidence are you basing that on? first of all, the genetic evidence.

Virus , Cases , Humans , Animals , Professor-koopmans , Team , Covid , Cluster , Wet-markets , Some , China , Parts