Metabiota, Inc., 425 California Street, San Francisco, CA, 94114, United States; Labyrinth Global Health, 546 15th Avenue, St. Petersburg, FL, 33704, United States.
Mosaic, BP, 35353, Yaounde, Cameroon.
Soc Sci Med. 2021 Jan;268:113358. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2020.113358. Epub 2020 Sep 17.
Behavioral practices are one of the key factors facilitating zoonotic disease transmission, especially in individuals who have frequent contact with wild animals, yet practices of those who work and live in high-risk animal-human interfaces, such as wild animal 'bushmeat' markets in the Congo Basin are not well documented in the social, health and medical sciences. This region, where hunting, butchering, and consumption of wild animal meat is frequent, represents a hotspot for disease emergence, and has experienced zoonotic disease spillover events, traced back to close human-animal contact with bats and non-human primates. Using a One Health approach, we conducted wildlife surveillance, human behavioral research, and concurrent human and animal biological sampling to identify and characterize factors associated with zoonotic disease emergence and transmission. Research was conducted through the USAID Emerging Pandemic Threats program between 2010 and 2019 including qualitative studies of bushmeat markets, with selected study sites prioritized based on proximity to bushmeat markets. Sites included two hospitals where we conducted surveillance of individuals with syndromes of acute febrile illness, community sites where we enrolled actors of the animal value chain (ie. hunters, middlemen, transporters), and bushmeat markets, where we enrolled bushmeat vendors, butchers, market managers, cleaners, and shoppers. Mixed methods research was undertaken at these sites and included investigation of bushmeat market dynamics through observational research, focus group discussions, quantitative questionnaires, and interviews. Participants were asked about their risk perception of zoonotic disease transmission and specific activities related to bushmeat trade, local market conditions, and regulations on bushmeat trade in Cameroon. Risks associated with blood contact and animal infection were not well understood by most market actors. As bushmeat markets are an important disease interface, as seen with CoVID19, risk mitigation measures in markets and bushmeat alternative strategies are discussed.
行为实践是促进人畜共患病传播的关键因素之一,尤其是在那些经常与野生动物接触的人群中,然而,在刚果盆地等高危动物-人类界面工作和生活的人,其行为实践在社会、健康和医学科学领域并未得到很好的记录。在这个地区,狩猎、屠宰和食用野生动物肉很常见,是疾病出现的热点地区,已经经历了人畜共患病溢出事件,可以追溯到与蝙蝠和非人类灵长类动物的密切接触。我们采用一种“同一健康”方法,进行了野生动物监测、人类行为研究以及同时进行的人类和动物生物采样,以确定和描述与人畜共患病出现和传播相关的因素。这项研究是由美国国际开发署的新兴传染病威胁项目在 2010 年至 2019 年期间进行的,包括对野味市场进行定性研究,并根据与野味市场的距离优先选择了一些研究地点。这些地点包括我们对患有急性发热综合征的个体进行监测的两家医院、我们招募动物价值链参与者(即猎人、中间商、运输者)的社区地点,以及我们招募野味销售商、屠夫、市场经理、清洁工和购物者的野味市场。在这些地点进行了混合方法研究,包括通过观察性研究、焦点小组讨论、定量问卷和访谈来调查野味市场动态。参与者被问及他们对人畜共患病传播的风险感知以及与野味贸易、当地市场条件和喀麦隆野味贸易法规相关的具体活动。大多数市场参与者并不十分了解与血液接触和动物感染相关的风险。由于野味市场是一个重要的疾病接口,正如 CoVID19 所看到的那样,讨论了市场中的风险缓解措施和野味替代策略。