National Institute of Advanced Studies, Bengaluru, India.
Am J Biol Anthropol. 2023 Dec;182(4):595-605. doi: 10.1002/ajpa.24613. Epub 2022 Sep 2.
Investigations into zoonotic disease outbreaks have been largely epidemiological and microbiological, with the primary focus being one of disease control and management. Increasingly though, the human-animal interface has proven to be an important driver for the acquisition and transmission of pathogens in humans, and this requires syncretic bio-socio-cultural enquiries into the origins of disease emergence, for more efficacious interventions. A biocultural lens is imperative for the examination of primate-related zoonoses, for the human-primate interface is broad and multitudinous, involving both physical and indirect interactions that occur due to shared spaces and ecologies. I use the case example of a viral zoonotic epidemic that is currently endemic to India, the Kysanaur Forest Disease, to show how biocultural anthropology provides a broad and integrative perspective into infectious disease ecology and presents new insights into the determinants of disease outbreaks. Drawing on insights from epidemiology, political ecology, primate behavioral ecology and ethnoprimatology, this paper demonstrates how human-primate interactions and shared ecologies impact infectious disease spread between human and nonhuman primate groups.
动物源传染病暴发的研究主要集中在流行病学和微生物学方面,主要关注疾病的控制和管理。然而,越来越多的证据表明,人与动物的相互作用是人类获得和传播病原体的重要驱动因素,这需要对疾病的起源进行综合的生物-社会-文化研究,以采取更有效的干预措施。对于灵长类动物相关的人畜共患病,生物文化视角是必不可少的,因为人类与灵长类动物的接触广泛而多样,包括由于共享空间和生态而发生的身体和间接相互作用。我使用印度目前流行的一种病毒性人畜共患传染病——基萨瑙尔森林病的案例,来说明生物文化人类学如何为传染病生态学提供广泛而综合的视角,并为疾病暴发的决定因素提供新的见解。本文借鉴流行病学、政治生态学、灵长类动物行为生态学和民族灵长类学的观点,展示了人类与灵长类动物的相互作用和共享生态如何影响人类和非人类灵长类动物群体之间传染病的传播。