Climate Change and Zoonoses: A Review of Concepts, Definitions, and Bibliometrics
Abstract
:1. Introduction
“Between animal and human medicine, there is no dividing line, nor should there be”.Rudolf Virchow (1821–1902)
- Endemic zoonoses are widespread among poor populaces and cause billions of illnesses and millions of fatalities each year. Examples of endemic zoonoses include cysticercosis, brucellosis, bovine tuberculosis, leptospirosis, and foodborne zoonoses.
- The outbreak of epidemic zoonoses usually occur infrequently, and anthrax, rabies, Rift Valley fever, and leishmaniasis are only a few examples. However, they may emerge in vulnerable populations due to climate change, flooding, reduced immunity, famine, or illness. Outbreaks show a high degree of temporal and spatial changeability [14].
- Emerging zoonoses might again emerge in a population or have occurred earlier, but currently, they are quickly increasing in terms of incidence or geographical area [14,15]. Two-third of all new and emerging infectious diseases is zoonoses [16]. Based on the evidence between 1940 and 2004, there have been reported around 335 cases of such events [17]. Moreover, it is suggested that COVID-19, caused by SARS-CoV-2, is to be classified under emerging infectious diseases (EIDs) of possible animal origin since no animal reservoir has yet been identified [18].
- Zoonoses were initially zoonotic, but nowadays, they are mainly or exclusively spread via human-to-human transmission. Diseases such as HIV/AIDS, pneumonia, malaria, measles, and dengue fever are included. Their current intensity is roughly comparable to endemic zoonoses (practically all because of HIV/AIDs) [14].
1.1. Classification of Zoonotic Diseases
- Direct zoonoses (orthozoonoses) are spread from an infected vertebrate host to a vulnerable vertebrate host via direct contact, contact with a fomite, or mechanical transmission. During such a process, the agent experiences little or no propagative modification and no significant developing alterations. Rabies, trichinosis, and brucellosis are only a few examples.
- Cyclozoonoses require a couple of vertebrate host species but no invertebrate host to complete the agent’s evolution cycle. Typical cyclozoonoses are Human taeniasis, Echinococcosis and Pentastomid infections.
- Invertebrate vectors transmit pherozoonose (metazoonoses): the agent multiplies, evolves, or both in the invertebrate, and there is always an inherent incubation period (prepatent) before transmission to another vertebrate host, wherever possible. Arbovirus infection, plague, and schistosomiasis are only some of many examples.
- Saprozoonoses have a vertebrate host and a non-animal developmental site or reservoir, i.e., food, soil, and plants. Examples include the various forms of larva migrants and some of the mycosis [6].
- (A)
- Anthropozoonoses—Hosts are lower animals;
- (B)
- Zooanthroponoses—Hosts are human beings;
- (C)
- Amphixenoses—Hosts are lower animals as well as humans.
- (1)
- Environment
- Synanthropic: The infectious agents’ cycle is restricted to domestic animals, for example, bovine tuberculosis, ringworm, and listeriosis. The transmission of these diseases occurs aerogenically through conjunctiva or percutaneously;
- Exoanthropic: The infectious agents’ cycle is within feral or animals living outside domestic boundaries, for example, tick-borne encephalitis or arboviruses. The transmission of infection from an animal to a human usually takes place through a hematophagous vector [26].
- (2)
- Etiology
- (A)
- Must be detected in all cases of the diseases;
- (B)
- Must be isolated and cultured in the laboratory;
- (C)
- Must be able to produce the disease in another host after laboratory cultivation;
- (D)
- Recovered from the same inoculated host;
- (E)
- Production of antibodies in the inoculated host.
- (3)
- Zoonotic Cycle
- Cyclozoonoses: The infectious agent life cycle requires more than one non-human vertebrate to be completed. Here, the non-human vertebrate acts as the intermediate host and harbors the infectious agent, which ultimately infects humans. Some examples include human taeniasis and Hydatid cyst disease. These zoonoses are relatively rare.
- Saprozoonoses: The life cycle of the infectious agent requires non-living matter, such as organic matter in the soil or water and non-human vertebrate hosts. However, direct infections, in this case, are rare. The sapronotic agents can multiply using two different life cycles either through a saprophytic life cycle via an abiotic agent or parasitically through a vertebrate host. Examples include swine erysipelas and actinomycosis.
- Orthozoonoses: They are also known as direct zoonoses. The vector transmission occurs through an infected to a susceptible vertebrate directly or via a rabies mechanical vector.
- Pherozoonoses: The vectors require both vertebrates and invertebrates for the completion of the life cycle. The vector multiples or develops in the invertebrate to spread, for example, arbovirus, plague, Lyme disease, and encephalitis.
1.2. Climate Change and Zoonoses
2. Materials and Methods
Search Strategy and Data Export and Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Documents by the Publication Year
3.2. Document by Source
3.3. Documents by Affiliations and Country
3.4. Documents by Type
3.5. Citation Index
3.6. Co-Authorship Analysis
3.7. Co-Occurrence Analysis
3.8. Citation Analysis
3.9. Leading Institutions and Countries
4. Discussion
- Zoonoses transmission of infections from animals to humans reaches 60% of the total infectious diseases [25].
- Zoonoses nowadays are mainly or exclusively spread via a human-to-human transmission (e.g., HIV/AIDS and dengue fever); their current intensity is roughly comparable to endemic zoonoses (practically all because of HIV/AIDs) [13].
- Global warming favors the increase of vector-borne diseases, especially in poorly developed countries [30].
- The rainfall and flooding increase, in many world regions’ favor, the possibility of waterborne diseases transmission [30].
- Climatic changes forced pathogens and vectors to develop adaptation mechanisms facilitating the spread of infections [32].
- The avian influenza of 2005 highlighted the interconnected animal, environmental, and human health [25].
- The northern regions were not much affected by zoonotic diseases in the past; however, recent evidence suggests that climate change has accelerated the spread of infections in northern countries. For instance, climate change has resulted in the early onset of winters characterized by increased wet conditions, correlated to the increased spread of diseases via the amplified intensity of pathogens rather than increased host abundance or distribution. This indicates that the global climate crisis also can alter the nature of zoonotic infections through its effect on temperature and precipitation [57].
5. Conclusions
- The number of published documents increased in 2009–2015, peaking in 2020 with almost 18% of the total coinciding with the COVID-19 outbreak.
- The primary sources are periodicals, such as the Parasites and Vectors journal, Veterinary Parasitology, OIE Revue Scientifique et Technique, and Plos Neglected Tropical Diseases. Most of the documents were published from 2013–2019, peaking in 2013 and 2017 and sharply decreasing onward; however, PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases reached the highest CiteScore in 2020.
- The top affiliation of authors is the Centers for Diseases Control and Prevention (USA). The USA, the UK, Australia, Canada, Germany, Italy, and Spain account for 85% of the authors.
- Journal articles were the primary document type (44.2%), followed by reviews (35.6%) and book chapters (6.5%).
- Sixty documents met the 60 citations (h-index) threshold; the most cited article was “Present and future arboviral threats” [54], published in the Antiviral Research Journal (n = 831).
- From the 132 countries included in the co-authorship analysis, 17 met the threshold (n = 5), led by the USA and followed by the UK, Canada, Australia, Italy, Germany, France, Sweden, Spain, and The Netherlands. Additionally, the visualization with the Vosviewer map showed four clusters sharing similar research interests. The largest node includes the USA, the UK, China, Australia, and Kenya. Italy and Germany led in the second-largest cluster, mainly from Europe plus New Zealand.
- The co-occurrence analysis “author keywords” showed that 13 keywords (out of 581) exceeded five occurrences; the top four were “climate change”, “zoonosis”, “epidemiology”, and “one health”. The VOSviewer map showed three clusters, the most prominent one including climate change, vector, climate, transmission, wildlife, and mosquitoes. Eighty keywords met the “index keyword” threshold (n = 10), with human, climate change, animals, non-human, and zoonosis being at the top.
- The citation analysis by authors (threshold: n = 3) and documents (n = 10) showed that only six authors (out of 740) and 58% of documents (out of 124) met the threshold.
- The USA, the UK, Germany, and Spain led the link strength (inter-collaboration), while the leading authors are from the USA, Spain, the UK, Italy, and Canada.
- The author keywords showed that 37 out of the 1023 keywords met the threshold (n = 5). The bibliometric map shows nine clusters and 185 links. The largest one contains seven items (infectious diseases, emerging diseases, disease ecology, one health, surveillance, transmission, and wildlife).
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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Rank | Affiliation | Documents |
---|---|---|
1st | Centers for Disease Control and Prevention | 16 |
2nd | The University of Queensland | 10 |
3rd | London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine | 10 |
4th | Harvard University | 9 |
5th | Københavns Universitet | 9 |
6th | Friedrich-Loeffler-Institute | 9 |
7th | Princeton University | 8 |
8th | The Australian National University | 8 |
9th | University of California, Davis | 8 |
10th | University of Saskatchewan | 8 |
Rank | Country/Territory | Documents |
---|---|---|
1st | United States | 130 |
2nd | United Kingdom | 71 |
3rd | Australia | 40 |
4th | Canada | 38 |
5th | Germany | 31 |
6th | Italy | 32 |
7th | Spain | 23 |
8th | China | 20 |
9th | France | 20 |
10th | India | 20 |
Rank | Country | Documents | Citations | Total Link Strength |
---|---|---|---|---|
1st | United States | 56 | 5087 | 53 |
2nd | United Kingdom | 31 | 3915 | 43 |
3rd | Canada | 18 | 1895 | 32 |
4th | Australia | 18 | 1314 | 17 |
5th | Italy | 17 | 2144 | 35 |
6th | Germany | 15 | 826 | 33 |
7th | France | 11 | 999 | 16 |
8th | Sweden | 10 | 374 | 20 |
9th | Spain | 9 | 885 | 22 |
10th | The Netherlands | 6 | 976 | 24 |
Rank | Keyword | Frequency | Total Link Strength |
---|---|---|---|
1st | Climate change | 28 | 27 |
2nd | Zoonosis | 20 | 15 |
3rd | Epidemiology | 14 | 10 |
4th | One health | 12 | 16 |
5th | Transmission | 7 | 8 |
6th | Wildlife | 7 | 8 |
7th | Bacteria | 6 | 7 |
8th | Ecology | 6 | 2 |
9th | Public health | 6 | 4 |
10th | Climate | 5 | 6 |
Red Cluster | Green Cluster | |||||
No | Keyword | Occurrences | TLS | Keyword | Occurrences | TLS |
1st | climate change | 116 | 1387 | Africa | 12 | 164 |
2nd | Zoonosis | 93 | 1158 | animal health | 12 | 173 |
3rd | Article | 50 | 571 | Asia | 10 | 144 |
4th | public health | 47 | 639 | deforestation | 10 | 164 |
5th | disease transmission | 44 | 610 | disease vectors | 14 | 216 |
6th | priority journal | 41 | 537 | domestic animal | 14 | 231 |
7th | disease carrier | 34 | 488 | epidemiology | 12 | 168 |
8th | risk assessment | 22 | 296 | Europe | 15 | 217 |
9th | Ecosystem | 20 | 285 | geographic distribution | 29 | 411 |
10th | Ecology | 18 | 280 | global change | 10 | 151 |
Blue Cluster | Yellow Cluster | |||||
No | Keyword | Occurrences | TLS | Keyword | Occurrences | TLS |
1st | Animals | 107 | 1315 | Human | 125 | 1501 |
2nd | non-human | 95 | 1249 | Review | 71 | 917 |
3rd | Parasitology | 23 | 332 | risk factor | 27 | 384 |
4th | Transmission | 23 | 327 | Epidemic | 25 | 346 |
5th | Isolation and purification | 18 | 247 | infection control | 22 | 293 |
6th | Microbiology | 17 | 226 | Wildlife | 20 | 317 |
7th | Virology | 17 | 233 | communicable diseases, emerging | 18 | 265 |
8th | disease surveillance | 15 | 213 | environmental factor | 18 | 266 |
9th | animals, wild | 14 | 233 | Incidence | 17 | 233 |
10th | Physiology | 14 | 180 | communicable disease | 16 | 202 |
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Leal Filho, W.; Ternova, L.; Parasnis, S.A.; Kovaleva, M.; Nagy, G.J. Climate Change and Zoonoses: A Review of Concepts, Definitions, and Bibliometrics. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2022, 19, 893. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19020893
Leal Filho W, Ternova L, Parasnis SA, Kovaleva M, Nagy GJ. Climate Change and Zoonoses: A Review of Concepts, Definitions, and Bibliometrics. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2022; 19(2):893. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19020893
Chicago/Turabian StyleLeal Filho, Walter, Linda Ternova, Sanika Arun Parasnis, Marina Kovaleva, and Gustavo J. Nagy. 2022. "Climate Change and Zoonoses: A Review of Concepts, Definitions, and Bibliometrics" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 19, no. 2: 893. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19020893
APA StyleLeal Filho, W., Ternova, L., Parasnis, S. A., Kovaleva, M., & Nagy, G. J. (2022). Climate Change and Zoonoses: A Review of Concepts, Definitions, and Bibliometrics. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 19(2), 893. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19020893