Suppr超能文献

用于评估人类与野生动物界面溢出可能性的快速风险评估框架。

Rapid Risk Assessment Framework to Estimate Potential for Spillback at Human-Wildlife Interfaces.

作者信息

McDevitt-Galles Travis, Fry Tricia L, Richgels Katherine L D, Grear Daniel A

机构信息

National Wildlife Health Center, U.S. Geological Survey, Madison, Wisconsin, USA.

出版信息

Transbound Emerg Dis. 2025 Jun 13;2025:4334954. doi: 10.1155/tbed/4334954. eCollection 2025.

Abstract

More than 60% of emerging infectious diseases of humans have a wildlife origin, and when these diseases spread through human populations to new geographical areas, there is a considerable risk of spillback from humans to wildlife species. Spillback events can have severe consequences for wildlife populations, where the disease may cause morbidity and mortality, and human populations, where the establishment in wildlife may lead to prolonged transmission or new exposures in humans. Mitigating these consequences requires identifying the key risk factors that lead to human-wildlife transmission events and implementing risk-reducing actions, a challenge given that cross-species transmission events are rare and often data deficient. To identify potential species and locations that are most likely to lead to these rare events, we developed a spatially explicit, rapid risk assessment framework that incorporates three components of the spillback process: wildlife susceptibility, wildlife exposure, and pathogen introduction pressure. To demonstrate the broad applicability of our framework, we conducted a rapid risk assessment on two recent emerging zoonotic pathogens in humans, severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) and mpox, to determine the relative spillback risk to wild mammalian species in the continental United States. The rapid risk assessment identified both species and locations with higher than expected spillback risk, providing managers and researchers with valuable information to prioritize surveillance and risk-mitigation actions. Our framework represents a rapid and flexible approach to assess the risks of spillback to wildlife populations during rapidly evolving zoonotic disease outbreaks.

摘要

超过60%的新发人类传染病源于野生动物,当这些疾病通过人类群体传播到新的地理区域时,存在从人类反向传播到野生动物物种的相当大风险。反向传播事件可能对野生动物种群造成严重后果,疾病可能导致发病和死亡,对人类种群也会造成严重后果,因为疾病在野生动物中的存在可能导致在人类中持续传播或产生新的暴露风险。减轻这些后果需要识别导致人类与野生动物传播事件的关键风险因素并采取降低风险的行动,鉴于跨物种传播事件罕见且往往数据不足,这是一项挑战。为了识别最有可能导致这些罕见事件的潜在物种和地点,我们开发了一个空间明确的快速风险评估框架,该框架纳入了反向传播过程的三个组成部分:野生动物易感性、野生动物暴露和病原体引入压力。为了证明我们框架的广泛适用性,我们对人类近期出现的两种人畜共患病原体——严重急性呼吸综合征冠状病毒2(SARS-CoV-2)和猴痘进行了快速风险评估,以确定美国大陆野生哺乳动物物种面临的相对反向传播风险。快速风险评估确定了反向传播风险高于预期的物种和地点,为管理人员和研究人员提供了有价值的信息,以便对监测和风险缓解行动进行优先排序。我们的框架代表了一种快速且灵活的方法,用于在快速演变的人畜共患病疫情期间评估向野生动物种群反向传播的风险。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/fdd3/12181658/974fe3d29b29/TBED2025-4334954.001.jpg

文献AI研究员

20分钟写一篇综述,助力文献阅读效率提升50倍。

立即体验

用中文搜PubMed

大模型驱动的PubMed中文搜索引擎

马上搜索

文档翻译

学术文献翻译模型,支持多种主流文档格式。

立即体验