Infectious Diseases Spreading Faster Than Ever - UN
SWITZERLAND: August 23, 2007
GENEVA - Infectious diseases are emerging more quickly around the globe,
spreading faster and becoming increasingly difficult to treat, the World
Health Organisation (WHO) said on Thursday.
In its annual World Health Report, the United Nations agency warned there
was a good possibility that another major scourge like AIDS, SARS or Ebola
fever with the potential of killing millions would appear in the coming
years.
"Infectious diseases are now spreading geographically much faster than at
any time in history," the WHO said.
It said it was vital to keep watch for new threats like the emergence in
2003 of SARS, or Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome, which spread from China
to 30 countries and killed 800 people.
"It would be extremely naive and complacent to assume that there will not be
another disease like AIDS, another Ebola, or another SARS, sooner or later,"
the report warned.
Since the 1970s, the WHO said, new threats have been identified at an
"unprecedented rate" of one or more every year, meaning that nearly 40
diseases exist today which were unknown just over a generation ago.
Over the last five years alone, WHO experts had verified more than 1,100
epidemics of different diseases.
With more than 2 billion people travelling by air every year, the UN agency
said: "an outbreak or epidemic in one part of the world is only a few hours
away from becoming an imminent threat somewhere else."
MONITORING VITAL
The report called for renewed efforts to monitor, prevent and control
epidemic-prone ailments such as cholera, yellow fever and meningococcal
diseases.
International assistance may be required to help health workers in poorer
countries identify and contain outbreaks of emerging viral diseases such as
Ebola and Marburg haemorrhagic fever, the WHO said.
It warned that global efforts to control infectious diseases have already
been "seriously jeopardised" by widespread drug resistance, a consequence of
poor medical treatment and misuse of antibiotics.
This is a particular problem in tuberculosis, where extensively
drug-resistant (XDR-TB) strains of the contagious respiratory ailment have
emerged worldwide.
"Drug resistance is also evident in diarrhoeal diseases, hospital-acquired
infections, malaria, meningitis, respiratory tract infections, and sexually
transmitted infections, and is emerging in HIV," the report declared.
Although the H5N1 bird flu virus has not mutated into a form that passes
easily between humans, as many scientists had feared, the next influenza
pandemic was "likely to be of an avian variety" and could affect some 1.5
billion people.
"The question of a pandemic of influenza from this virus or another avian
influenza virus is still a matter of when, not if," the WHO said.
It said all countries must share essential health data, such as virus
samples and reports of outbreaks, as required under international health
rules, to mitigate such risks.
Accidents involving toxic chemicals, nuclear power and other environmental
disasters should also be communicated quickly and clearly to minimise public
health threats.
Story by Laura MacInnis
REUTERS NEWS SERVICE
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