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The costs and benefits of primary prevention of zoonotic pandemics.

Authors :
Bernstein AS
Ando AW
Loch-Temzelides T
Vale MM
Li BV
Li H
Busch J
Chapman CA
Kinnaird M
Nowak K
Castro MC
Zambrana-Torrelio C
Ahumada JA
Xiao L
Roehrdanz P
Kaufman L
Hannah L
Daszak P
Pimm SL
Dobson AP
Source :
Science advances [Sci Adv] 2022 Feb 04; Vol. 8 (5), pp. eabl4183. Date of Electronic Publication: 2022 Feb 04.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

The lives lost and economic costs of viral zoonotic pandemics have steadily increased over the past century. Prominent policymakers have promoted plans that argue the best ways to address future pandemic catastrophes should entail, "detecting and containing emerging zoonotic threats." In other words, we should take actions only after humans get sick. We sharply disagree. Humans have extensive contact with wildlife known to harbor vast numbers of viruses, many of which have not yet spilled into humans. We compute the annualized damages from emerging viral zoonoses. We explore three practical actions to minimize the impact of future pandemics: better surveillance of pathogen spillover and development of global databases of virus genomics and serology, better management of wildlife trade, and substantial reduction of deforestation. We find that these primary pandemic prevention actions cost less than 1/20th the value of lives lost each year to emerging viral zoonoses and have substantial cobenefits.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2375-2548
Volume :
8
Issue :
5
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Science advances
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
35119921
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.abl4183