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Quantum fluctuations in space, science, exploration and other cosmic fields... served up regularly by MSNBC.com science editor Alan Boyle since 2002.

Alan Boyle covers the physical sciences, anthropology, technological innovation and space science and exploration for MSNBC.com. He is a winner of the AAAS Science Journalism Award, the NASW Science-in-Society Award and other honors; a contributor to "A Field Guide for Science Writers"; and a member of the board of the Council for the Advancement of Science Writing.

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How to prevent a pandemic

Posted: Thursday, May 17, 2007 8:47 PM by Alan Boyle

Where did global scourges like AIDS, smallpox, cholera and the black plague come from? Most of them got their start in other animals, then made the cross-species jump to infect humans. If only we could have spotted the malicious microbes when they were just beginning to make that jump.... That's exactly what three prominent researchers are proposing we do, by establishing a global "early warning system" for infectious diseases.

The system would involve periodic testing of people who come in close contact with wild animals, ranging from zoo workers to hunters. One of the scientists says such a system could have changed the course of the global AIDS crisis ... if only it had been in place 40 years ago.

The proposal comes in an research review article written for the journal Nature by Nathan Wolfe, Claire Panosian Dunavan and Jared Diamond of the University of California at Los Angeles. Diamond is the most famous member of the trio, thanks to his best-selling books "Guns, Germs and Steel" and "Collapse: How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed." Wolfe and Panosian Dunavan are also well-known for their work in epidemiology.

Wolfe, the recipient of an NIH Director's Pioneer Award and a member of Popular Science's "Brilliant 10" for 2005, says that setting up a sentinel system for bad bugs is a "no-brainer."

"In 100 years, when people look back on this period of history, they will say that we worked very hard to control existing pandemics, but we did very little to try to prevent future pandemics," Wolfe told me today. "Global disease control today is like cardiology was in the '50s. Instead of preventing pandemics, we wait until the 'heart attack' occurs - of course, at which time it's often too late."

In this week's Nature article, Wolfe and his colleagues recap what we've found out about the emergence of infectious diseases over the centuries. They trace five stages leading from first  cross-species transmission to human pandemic:

  • Pathogens found only in animals but not detected in humans under natural conditions - for example, most known malarial plasmodia.
  • Pathogens that are transmitted from animals to humans but not generally among humans, such as anthrax, rabies and West Nile virus.
  • Pathogens that jump from animals to humans, but appear to be transmitted among humans for only a few cycles before the outbreak dies out. The Ebola and Marburg viruses are examples.
  • Pathogens that can be transmitted from animals to humans, and also from human to human in a long outbreak cycle. This category takes in cholera, influenza A, typhus, yellow fever and dengue fever.
  • Pathogens that are passed exclusively from human to human, either because they go back to the beginnings of humanity or because the species-jumping microbe quickly evolved to become human-specific. Examples of the Stage 5 sicknesses include HIV-1 M, the virus that causes AIDS, as well as measles, mumps, rubella, smallpox and syphilis.

The researchers go on to note how infectious agents linked to animals have shaped history - for example, why indigenous Americans were vulnerable to European settlers' diseases but not vice versa (it has to do with domesticated animals, or the lack thereof).

They wind up their paper with the call to action, starting out with a proposal for an "origins initiative" to fill the gaps in our knowledge about the roots of a dozen major diseases: AIDS, cholera, dengue fever, falciparum malaria, hepatitis B, influenza A, measles, plague, rotavirus, smallpox, tuberculosis and typhoid. Pathogens from a wide range of wild and domesticated animals would be analyzed. Here's what the Nature authors say could result from such an effort:

"In addition to the historical and evolutionary significance of knowledge gained through such an origins initiative, it could yield other benefits such as: identifying the closest relatives of human pathogens; a better understanding of how diseases have emerged; new laboratory models for studying public health threats; and perhaps clues that could aid in predictions of future disease threats."

That dovetails nicely with the early warning system: 

"Most major human infectious diseases have animal origins, and we continue to be bombarded by novel animal pathogens. Yet there is no ongoing systematic global effort to monitor for pathogens emerging from animals to humans. Such an effort could help us to describe the diversity of microbial agents to which our species is exposed; to characterize animal pathogens that might threaten us in the future; and perhaps to detect and control a local human emergence before it has a chance to spread globally.

"In our view, monitoring should focus on people with high levels of exposure to wild animals, such as hunters, butchers of wild game, wildlife veterinarians, workers in the wildlife trade and zoo workers. Such people regularly become infected with animal viruses, and their infections can be monitored over time and traced to other people in contact with them."

Samples from the target groups would be analyzed for the telltale signs of emerging diseases - for example, retroviruses in the blood of bushmeat hunters. In the event of a future outbreak, public health experts could check the tissue repository to reconstruct the roots of the pathogen and come up with countermeasures.

The years-long battle against bird flu illustrates how difficult it is to fight an emerging disease - and how important the fight has become.

Eight years ago, Wolfe set up a pilot project to monitor "viral chatter" in Cameroon, by testing bushmeat hunters and their kills for blood pathogens. In the course of the project, he and his team came across three previously unknown retroviruses (that is, from the same family as HIV) and educated the hunters on safer practices for handling animals and meat.

Now Wolfe says he is "scrambling" to set up a bigger monitoring system in Cameroon as well as the Democratic Republic of Congo, Malaysia, China, Madagascar and Paraguay, using his $2.5 million in seed money from the National Institutes of Health. "The idea is that we will move out to other bilateral partners," he told me.

Wolfe said such a system might have picked up on the HIV epidemic in its earliest stages, had it been around then.

"Had we caught HIV in the '60s ... we would have been way ahead of the game. Each extra month of early warning leads to massive lives saved and financial resources preserved. You don't have to hit a home run. If you get a base hit with one of these systems, you get a huge benefit," he said.

Wolfe emphasized that the focus of such a system would be on local health authorities, with government agencies and philanthropic institutions playing a supporting role.

"What this is about is local scientists stepping up and saying, 'Look, we've got major emerging infectious diseases in our country, and we'd like to play a part,'" he said.

Eventually, the system could evolve into something of an Interpol for infectious diseases - turning national public health databases into an international whole that's greater than the sum of its parts. "This takes advantage of global public health needs," Wolfe said.

For the full story on infectious diseases and the proposed early warning system, check out this report on SciDev.net, then follow the Web link at the bottom of the report for free access to the Nature paper itself. This UCLA news release and this Wired article provide additional insights.

Is such a system too troublesome and expensive to create - or is the cost of not creating it  too great? Feel free to weigh in with your comments below.

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I think part of what's being overlooked is that many of these retroviruses, in their initial, alienated stages, lead to a certain level of dypthotic languish on the part of the monitoring infrastructure. If we can curtail that, we can achieve a lot.
My overall feeling is that even fairly significant testing would be hard pressed to find a disease before it became a problem but I’d be all for trying what they’ve proposed.  As you know I like to propose much more self-sufficient homes and communities which is not only good for the environment (as it virtually eliminates daily travel) but it would also help insulate us from major natural disasters and things like Pandemics.  If we work at home (or within just a few blocks), teach our kids at home, and avoid an excessive dependency on shopping for our every need, we lessen our contact with the overall population and thus lower the potential spread of disease.  The more interdependent society becomes the more vulnerable it becomes.  Imagine a pandemic outbreak in Silicon Valley, Boeing's Everett Washington facility, Microsoft headquarters, or Tokyo…  The world has become entirely far too dependent on such key/singular locations.  We need more abilities all over to cope with anything and everything that comes our way!
It makes me feel good to know that there are people out there trying to make a discovery that can save and change this world.
I fear the discovery process would likely resemble that of mad cow, AIDS, or ebola. Most common trans-species diseases are already known (tularemia among rabbits, TB among deer, etc) to hunting communities... the difficulty will be the strange things that come up, and that's just going to take a lot of monitoring.
show some restraint...in the mid-eighties, WHO came within days of announcing that AIDS was progressing geometrically...everyone gone within a few multiples...only reason the announcement was stopped is like not telling the populace about Aliens...we know better...good ol' we know better...it's gotten us into one hell of a mess here! maybe you know better...pitch in...
First, get the money.  Second get the facilities for the testing and storage.  Thirdly, protect the people who are doing the field work.

Unfortunately, the areas that need to be monitored are those with the least knowledge of science, and frequently the highest levels of superstition.

Now, just imagine a world with leaders who have the vision to properly fund preventative medical measures and asteroid searches.  Damned if I can!
Chris, 

 Sorry, your recommendations "ain't gonna" work!

The Black Plague killed @ 25% (or more) of the European population. Those who had survived had immune systems that resisted the pathogen and, therefore, their offspring would also inherit immunity to the plague. Evolution!   

 The same with the "Spanish Flu" early 20th Century. 

 The same with the West Nile Virus. 

 So, developing vaccinations, immunity, and/or using biogenetic technologies to eradicate the pathogens or insect carriers or other parasites... 

 If you really want "isolation": space stations, or colonies on the Moon, Mars, asteroids, space habitats, etc..  
It takes vision to be proactive regarding future pandemics, unfortunately, ours is not a proactive society. We've been dodging bullets with Ebola and Marburg. It's just a matter of time until a new virus hits us, and then we'll all cry, why didn't anyone see this coming?
Its always important to be as proactive as possible especially in the realm of the public's health. So.. Go Science! It's the reactive part of the process where society trips and stumbles over itself.

We need to heed the lessons of history, we know what to do. What's wrong with our instincts? Are they lost?
I certainly agree with isolating people from society and creating complete and total singular independence.  That way, instead of somebody noticing that I'm missing, I can lay dead in my house for weeks (or years) on end before ever being found.  Isolation is the key to societal success.  It worked for the UNABOMer.

Not.

The only way we're going to be completely safe is to wrap our heads in sterile plastic bags.  Then we'll never catch any disease.  Prevention, environmental responsibility, good diet, and general physical well being also go a long way toward maintaining natural resistance to all the icky stuff that wants to get into our icky stuff.
Am I making any sense here? Why is having to travel to work and being so dependent on others such a good thing? IT DOES increase our vulnerability to anything and everything from gas spikes to the Bird flu. Craftsmanship and quality could also be improved if we did more things for ourselves. I've come to the determination that any mention of a little something called planning is often met with resistance as if doing things haphazardly was the best way.
Given international air travel, a pandemic flu will spread worldwide within days. Therefore as with any looming disaster, prevention is key. There are two free guides to bird flu preparedness at:

http://www.pandemicflu.gov

and

http://www.pandemicinfosite.com


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