Rodier G R, Parra J P, Kamil M, Chakib S O, Cope S E
Risk Assessment Branch, U.S. Naval Medical Research Unit No. 3, Cairo, Egypt.
Bull World Health Organ. 1995;73(6):755-9.
Public health authorities are now increasingly concerned by changes in the epidemiology of infectious diseases which may have an adverse impact on their budget plans and control strategies. Rapid increases in population and urban migration, various ecological changes, increasing poverty, and a rise in international travel have contributed to the worldwide vulnerability of human populations to the emergence, recurrence or spread of infectious diseases. In the rapidly growing city of Djibouti in East Africa, public health priorities have been altered during the last 10 years by diseases which were unknown or under control until the early 1980s. These diseases, including malaria, AIDS, tuberculosis, dengue fever and cholera, are consuming considerable resources. This article on Djibouti illustrates the epidemiological changes in the region. Besides the specific ecological and behavioural changes, which accompany rapid population growth, poverty seems to be a major cause for the emergence and recurrence of infectious diseases.
公共卫生当局现在越来越关注传染病流行病学的变化,这些变化可能会对其预算计划和控制策略产生不利影响。人口的快速增长和城市迁移、各种生态变化、贫困加剧以及国际旅行的增加,都导致全球人口更容易受到传染病的出现、复发或传播的影响。在东非快速发展的吉布提市,过去10年里,公共卫生重点因一些在20世纪80年代初之前还不为人知或已得到控制的疾病而发生了改变。这些疾病包括疟疾、艾滋病、结核病、登革热和霍乱,正在消耗大量资源。这篇关于吉布提的文章阐述了该地区的流行病学变化。除了伴随人口快速增长出现的特定生态和行为变化外,贫困似乎是传染病出现和复发的一个主要原因。