The one health perspective to improve environmental surveillance of zoonotic viruses: lessons from COVID-19 and outlook beyond

Mats Leifels(Nanyang Technological University), Omar Khalilur Rahman(University of Malaya), I‐Ching Sam(University Malaya Medical Centre), Dan Cheng(Nanyang Technological University), Feng Jun Desmond Chua(Nanyang Technological University), Dhiraj Nainani(Nanyang Technological University), Se Yeon Kim(Nanyang Technological University), W.J. Ng(Nanyang Technological University), Wee Chiew Kwok(Nanyang Technological University), Kwanrawee Sirikanchana(Chulabhorn Research Institute), Stefan Wuertz(Nanyang Technological University), Janelle R. Thompson(Nanyang Technological University), Yoke Fun Chan(University of Malaya)
ISME Communications
October 30, 2022
Cited by 71Open Access
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Abstract

The human population has doubled in the last 50 years from about 3.7 billion to approximately 7.8 billion. With this rapid expansion, more people live in close contact with wildlife, livestock, and pets, which in turn creates increasing opportunities for zoonotic diseases to pass between animals and people. At present an estimated 75% of all emerging virus-associated infectious diseases possess a zoonotic origin, and outbreaks of Zika, Ebola and COVID-19 in the past decade showed their huge disruptive potential on the global economy. Here, we describe how One Health inspired environmental surveillance campaigns have emerged as the preferred tools to monitor human-adjacent environments for known and yet to be discovered infectious diseases, and how they can complement classical clinical diagnostics. We highlight the importance of environmental factors concerning interactions between animals, pathogens and/or humans that drive the emergence of zoonoses, and the methodologies currently proposed to monitor them-the surveillance of wastewater, for example, was identified as one of the main tools to assess the spread of SARS-CoV-2 by public health professionals and policy makers during the COVID-19 pandemic. One-Health driven approaches that facilitate surveillance, thus harbour the potential of preparing humanity for future pandemics caused by aetiological agents with environmental reservoirs. Via the example of COVID-19 and other viral diseases, we propose that wastewater surveillance is a useful complement to clinical diagnosis as it is centralized, robust, cost-effective, and relatively easy to implement.


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