COMMENTS

  1. A One Health framework for exploring zoonotic interactions

    Zoonoses are caused by pathogens naturally transmissible between humans and wild or domestic animals. Places where humans and animals or animal products interact create interfaces that facilitate...

  2. Linkages between environmental issues and zoonotic diseases: …

    In a study, Bloomfield et al. stated that deforestation and landscape fragmentation can increase the prevalence of novel zoonotic diseases. By using behavioral survey data and high …

  3. Zoonotic outbreak risk prediction with long short-term memory …

    Our study successfully developed LSTM hybrid models for disease outbreak risk prediction using three zoonotic diseases as case studies. We demonstrate that the LSTM, …

  4. Characteristics of the 100 largest modern zoonotic …

    Overall, our case study shows that the characteristics of large zoonotic outbreaks with thousands to millions of cases differ consistently from those of more typical outbreaks. We also discuss the limitations of our work, …

  5. A descriptive study of zoonotic disease risk at the human-wildlife ...

    Study suggests some of the pathways for zoonotic disease spillover to humans exist at interface areas driven by livelihoods, nutrition and cultural needs. This study offers …

  6. Zoonotic diseases: New directions in human–animal pathology

    The seven papers in this special issue “Zoonotic diseases: New directions in human–animal pathology” cover a range of diseases caused by bacterial, viral, and parasitic …

  7. Global hotspots and correlates of emerging zoonotic …

    Zoonoses originating from wildlife represent a significant threat to global health, security and economic growth, and combatting their emergence is a public health priority. However, our...

  8. Impacts of biodiversity and biodiversity loss on zoonotic diseases

    Here, we evaluate recent evidence indicating how biodiversity affects both the emergence of new zoonotic diseases and the transmission of established ones. We first explore the effects of …