Wednesday, February 20, 2008

Next plague likeliest to emerge from poor tropical countries

Scores of infectious diseases have emerged to threaten humans in the past decades as viruses leap the species barrier from wild animals and bacteria mutate into antibiotic-resistant strains, scientists reported on Wednesday.

Presenting the first-ever map of "hotspots" of new infectious diseases, they predict that the next pandemic is likeliest to come out of poor tropical countries, where burgeoning human populations come into contact with wildlife.


[. . .]


The emergence of new diseases have roughly quadrupled over the past 50 years, says the study, appearing in the British journal Nature.

Sixty percent of them are so-called zoonoses, or diseases that have been transmitted from animals to humans.

2 comments:

Tony F. said...

Makes sense... more people, more warm bodies to feed off of, more iterations of viral infections.

When does the "Rage" virus hit?

Anonymous said...

Sixty percent of them are so-called zoonoses, or diseases that have been transmitted from animals to humans.

And here I always thought zoonoses were what kids pressed against glass cages when watching the animals inside....