“In
every 5 diseases blowing up your health, at least 3 of them dawn from animal
sources”, this is according to One Health Global Initiative. Animals do harbor
manifold parasites that sometimes do cause diseases to them in return. Human-animal
interaction is an unavoidable verity; the parasites are always traversing from the
harboring animals to humans in various ways as sited below. The parasites always
advance cross cutting upshots during the interactions but often, these
parasites become very treacherous and virulent once they enter into humans e.g.
in cases like Ebola, Marburg and Rabies that are passively harbored and cause
no clear disease threats to gorillas, bats and dogs respectively unlike they do
once they infiltrate humans. These diseases bred and spread by or from animals
to humans (or vice versa) are scientifically termed as Zoonotic diseases (or
zoonoses). “Zoonotic diseases account for the 2.2 million deaths each year
worldwide with most of the deaths occurring in low and middle income countries
in Africa, Asia and South America’s Brazil.” this was according to a study
release entitled “Mapping of poverty and Likely Zoonoses” by the International
Livestock Research Institute (ILRI).
Zoonotic
diseases have profound collective impact in debilitating the health and
productivity more notably in rural communities of developing countries. “Targeting
the diseases in the hardest hit countries is crucial to protecting global
health as well as reducing severe levels of poverty and illness among the
world.”, Delia Grace, a veterinary epidemiologist and food safety expert with
the ILRI in Kenya, Africa.
In
Uganda, the most outrageous and notorious zoonoses are; brucellosis from milk,
bovine/cow TB, Cysticercosis, Rabies, Trypanosomiasis, Ebola, Marburg, Malaria
etc. however, most of them fall under neglected diseases that receive little to
no attention and funding from the public health unit of the country.
According
to Dr. Monica Monsenero an Epidemiologist at African Field Epidemiology Network
(AFENET) in Uganda, “most zoonoses fall in a gap between public health and
animal health. For instance rabies, brucellosis and bovine TB kill a number of
Ugandans annually but there is no clear data as no one is paying sober
attention to them. Huge economic implications associated with building
diagnostic and control means often leave most developing intentionally
unbothered. Finally the gap between most disciplines, for instance, the
veterinary and medical professionals are trained separately and they each work
separately with little to no interaction between them, this complicates the
whole desired steps for appropriate response to zoonotic diseases especially in
Africa.”
Exclusive
of dwellers neighboring park locales that often burgeon in poaching and feasting
on game meat, most human infections with zoonoses come from;
1) Livestock, including pigs, chickens,
cattle, sheep and goats.
2) Pets and rodents like dog, cat
and mouse are also inclusive as zoonotic agents.
3) Vectors like mosquito, tsetse fly, tick,
kissing bug and bed bug
Humans
contract these zoonoses through:
·
Interaction
with fluids from the infected animal (blood, urine, saliva and feces)
·
Eating
and drinking products from infected animals (e.g. undercooked meat, game meat, unpasteurized milk, unwashed fruits/fruits bit
by bats, vegetable grown and infected by animal faeces and urine)
·
Being
bitten by an infected dog/pet, or vectors like mosquito, tsetse fly, tick or
bed bug
These
zoonotic diseases include Influenza (commonly known as flu) with a major
epidemic that swept the world in 1918 killing over 50 million people. Influenza
is a viral disease commonly carried by pigs (swine flu) and chickens (bird flu).
In Uganda, a clear occurrence was 2015 swine flu outbreak in southern district
of Rakai. Bubonic plague epidemic in the
1300s that eroded humanity piling corpses from the European streets to deep
villages of South Africa, and it is estimated that 75 million lives were lost
in the aggressive hand of this plague. Bubonic plague is a disease caused by
Yesinia pestis, a parasite carried rodents including cats and transmitted by
fleas. In Uganda, the disease is prevalent in northwestern districts of Nebbi
and Arua with major outbreak reported in 2011. Rabies kills around 55,000
people globally each year, with most deaths occurring in Asia and Africa.
Rabies is caused by a virus often carried by dogs and other wild animals.
In
lines with vectors, mosquito is the top culprit causing over 400 million people
globally each year, the leading cause of death in sub-Saharan Africa. Over 1.2
million people die each year from malaria with children making bulk of the
victims. Mosquito also transmit other ailments like Zika virus (a massive
burden in South America today), yellow fever, Q-fever and dengue fever during
their bites. Trypanosomiasis (sleeping sickness) is transmitted by tsetse fly;
however, it is being put under control. Chagas disease is transmitted by
triatomes and bed bugs through their feces and bites.
Today,
over 35 million people are living with HIV/AIDS globally. HIV is thought to
have originated from chimpanzees and other primates in Africa forests. Ebola
originated from chimpanzees and gorillas, thousands of lives have been lost in
major outbreaks occurring in Africa. “28,637 cases and 11,315 deaths have been
reported worldwide” WHO. Marburg virus disease was first identified in 1967 in
Germany from infected monkeys imported from Uganda. Both the highly virulent
Ebola and Marburg viruses are also carried by bats that always bite fruits
eaten by humans and they live in close proximity to humans especially in Africa.
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