Warning from UN over rise in diseases jumping from animals to humans like Covid-19

Viruses jumping from animals to humans are becoming more common, the United Nations has warned.

The UN’s environmental branch revealed that the emergence of SARS-CoV-2 — the coronavirus that causes Covid-19 — came as no surprise.

In a report, they said the pandemic was ‘highly predictable’ because human behaviour, including intense farming for meat, has triggered a surge in zoonotic diseases. 

The United Nations Environment Department (UNEP) claimed the coronavirus most likely originated in bats. 

Research has also pointed towards pangolins — which look like scaly anteaters — as a possible bridge between bats and humans. It may have evolved to become more infectious before bridging from the pangolin to a person. 

A ‘zoonotic disease’ is one that is able to be transmitted from a vertebrate animal — such as a mammal, bird, reptile or fish — to a human.

Zoonotic diseases include Ebola, a killer disease that originated in monkeys, and MERS, another type of coronavirus linked to camels.

A UN report has warned viruses from animals to humans are becoming increasingly common, and Covid-19 was 'highly predictable'. Covid-19 likely spread from a bat (stock)

A UN report has warned viruses from animals to humans are becoming increasingly common, and Covid-19 was ‘highly predictable’. Covid-19 likely spread from a bat (stock)

Experts say outbreaks among people tend to stem from human exploitation of wildlife, including intense battery farming and selling meat for food.

Every year two million people — mostly in poor countries — die of zoonotic diseases such as rabies, according to the UN report. 

The Covid-19 pandemic has killed some 543,600 people globally in the eight months since it was formally identified. Millions have been infected.

The virus is considered to be zoonotic because it is believed to have first been caught by humans at livestock market in the Chinese city of Wuhan.  

However, the jury is still out because the mysterious infection has only been known to science since the turn of the year.  

The UNEP published the report on zoonotic diseases with the International Livestock Research Institute (ILRI). 

Professor Delia Randolph, a veterinary epidemiologist and lead author of the report, said: ‘This was a highly predictable pandemic. 

GOING VEGAN AND BANNING WILDLIFE TRADE ‘COULD REDUCE ZOONOTIC DISEASE’ 

Going vegan, banning the trade of exotic animals and clamping down on crowded farms could prevent the world from being ravaged by another pandemic, leading scientists warned in June.

A 25-strong team of wildlife and veterinary experts have identified seven routes by which pandemics could occur moving forward — and ways to reduce the risk of another infectious disease striking every corner of the planet.

The team — led by Cambridge University experts — said humans must drastically change the way they interact with animals or it is ‘only a matter of time’ before another pandemic rocks the world.

The group said wildlife farming, the transport, trade and consumption of meat, the exotic pet industry and increased human encroachment on wildlife habitats, are among the ways new diseases could spread in humans.

They proposed clamping down on the amount of animals people can farm, keeping livestock away from domestic pets and even going vegan to reduce the risk.

Eating a more plant-based diet would bring down the global demand for animal meat and lead to less animals being farmed and transported in cramped conditions, where disease can easily jump between species, the researchers claim.

Lead researcher Professor William Sutherland, a zoologist at the University of Cambridge, said: ‘A lot of recent campaigns have focused on banning the trade of wild animals, and dealing with wild animal trade is really important yet it’s only one of many potential routes of infection.

‘We should not assume the next pandemic will arise in the same way as Covid-19; we need to be acting on a wider scale to reduce the risk.’

‘While many in the world were surprised by Covid-19, those of us who work on animal disease were not.’ 

Professor Randolph described a ‘very clear trend’ since the 1930s that showed that 75 per cent of emerging human diseases stemmed from wildlife. 

Ebola, of which the largest global outbreak occurred from 2014 to 2016 and another in 2019, is one example. 

Further outbreaks will emerge unless governments take active measures to prevent other zoonotic diseases from crossing into the human population, the report said. 

Experts identified seven trends driving the prevalence of zoonotic diseases, which included climate change.

‘The science is clear that if we keep exploiting wildlife and destroying our ecosystems, then we can expect to see a steady stream of these diseases jumping from animals to humans in the years ahead,’ said UNEP executive director Inger Andersen. 

Destruction of animals’ habitats forces them into closer contact with humans, raising the risk of disease transmission.

Climate change can contribute to this by making extreme weather events like flooding more common, driving animals out of their homes. 

In Madagascar, for example, the bubonic plague is spread by rodents fleeing wildfires, which are becoming more common as the Earth heats up.  

Human activity also often breaks down the natural barriers which protect humans from disease pathogens, according to the UNEP. 

A major transmission route between the environment and humans is through the hunting and eating of wild, exotic animals.

Illegal wildlife trade can see a range of live animals, including bats, come into close proximity with people in markets.   

Snakes, beavers, porcupines and baby crocodiles were among the species for sale at the Huanan Seafood Wholesale Market in Wuhan.

It is normal culture in China but there have been calls for the markets to be banned in order to protect wildlife and halt the emergence of zoonotic diseases.

Aside from lives lost, zoonotic diseases have caused economic losses of more than $100billion (£80bn) in the last two decades alone.

The cost of the Covid-19 pandemic — which is still rattling on and worsening in some parts of the world — is expected to cost $9trillion (£7.2tn) over the next few years.

African nations have the potential to leverage their extensive experience of zoonotic diseases such as Ebola to tackle future outbreaks, the UN said.  

African nations combine public health, veterinary and environmental expertise and achieve faster responses to outbreaks, said ILRI director general Jimmy Smith. 

Professor Randolph said: ‘If pandemics can be caught right at the start, [studies have shown that] the costs can be reduced by 90 per cent.’

WHAT ARE ZOONOTIC DISEASES?

Zoonotic diseases are those that are able to pass from vertebrate animals such as mammals, fish, birds and reptiles, to humans.

The infecting agent – called a pathogen – in these diseases is able to cross the species border and still survive. 

They range in potency, and are often less dangerous in one species than they are in another. 

In order to be successful they rely on long and direct contact with different animals. 

Covid-19 (suspected)

Covid-19 is the disease caused by SARS-CoV-2. It already has had its genome compared to the genetic sequences of more than 200 other coronaviruses from around the world that infect various animals. 

SARS-CoV-2 appears to be a recent mix, or genetic recombination, of coronaviruses. As a result of this recombination, one of the proteins of SARS-CoV-2 enables the virus to enter the cells of humans. 

Other research has shown the virus to be 96 per cent identical to a previously identified bat coronavirus, with a common ancestor about 50 years ago. 

It is hypothesized that this is the origin of the unknown pathway that resulted in the transmission of SARSCoV-2 to humans in 2019. Research points towards pangolins as a possible bridge between bats and humans, but this has not been proven.

SARS

SARS-CoV, the coronavirus that causes severe acute respiratory syndrome, or SARS, was first reported in China in February 2003 and likely originated from bats, probably then spreading to other animals (likely civet cats) and then to humans. 

The illness then spread to more than two dozen countries in North America, South America, Europe and Asia before it II was contained. Over 8,000 cases were reported and nearly 800 people died of the disease. Since 2004 there have not been any reported cases.

MERS

The coronavirus that causes Middle East respiratory syndrome, or MERS, was first reported in Saudi Arabia in 2012 and has a higher mortality rate than SARS. 

MERS-CoV can occur zoonotically from human contact with camels but has secondary cycles of spread from ill people to other people through close contact. 

To date, there have been around 2,500 laboratory confirmed cases mostly human to human, of which more than one third proved fatal. Sporadic cases continue to occur as the infection remains present in dromedary camels.

Influenza (flu)

Common examples are the strains of influenza that have adapted to survive in humans from various different host animals. 

H5N1, H7N9 and H5N6 are all strains of avian influenza which originated in birds and infected humans. 

A 2009 outbreak of swine flu – H1N1 – was considered a pandemic and governments spent millions developing ‘tamiflu’ to stop the spread of the disease.

source: dailymail.co.uk