Mpox outbreak should lead humanity to revise its relations with nature: Experts
Public health experts urge a rethink of humanity's relationship with nature to prevent future pandemics, highlighting how environmental destruction and increased contact with wildlife contribute to the spread of diseases. They stress that without addressing these root causes and improving global preparedness, similar crises will continue to emerge.
- Life
- Anadolu Agency
- Published Date: 01:40 | 06 September 2024
- Modified Date: 01:47 | 06 September 2024
Humanity must start rethinking its relations with nature to prevent further pandemics, public health experts told Anadolu amid an mpox outbreak that has left the world on edge, fearing a return to the COVID era.
People returned to their previous lifestyles despite knowing that new pandemics were likely on the horizon, said Jean-Daniel Lelievre, a professor of clinical immunology, vaccination specialist and expert consultant to the French National Immunization Technical Advisory Group (NITAG) and European Medicines Agency (EMA).
"We must bear in mind that this is all related to our lifestyles, to climate change … We are in contact with a natural habitat that we are not used to. We will attract some pathogens. And given the size of contact that we have among us human beings, we will see those epidemic phenomena," Lelievre told Anadolu.
He stressed that as human beings destroy the environment and natural habitats, there is more and more contact with animals that already carry some viruses.
"Then we encourage human contacts. Thus the adaptation of the virus to human beings, and then an explosion. This is what we observed with HIV," the virus behind the AIDS epidemic that exploded in the 1980s and '90s, he said.
"HIV was probably confined in African populations for a very long time, and then with the colonization of Africa … the virus found better welcoming populations to mutate rapidly and cause pandemics."
"We can develop vaccines. We can develop strategies. But if we do not modify the environment, it will certainly all repeat," he warned.
Dr. Mehmet Ceyhan, head of the Infectious Diseases Association based in Ankara, Türkiye, said the primary and the intermediate hosts of those viruses were always wild animals.
"For example, flu is a bird disease," he said, adding that COVID-19 came from a virus found in bats.
"There are some spots where the animals who migrate from Siberia to Africa are used to stopping over for hundreds of years now. If human beings go and install houses there and make contact with those birds, the viruses that they used to carry without any harm would create pandemics for human beings," he warned.
"If you do not make contact with monkeys and leave them in their natural habitats, there is no chance of this disease affecting you. Unfortunately, human greed damages nature and hits us back as a pandemic. It can't go on like this. If we continue like this, the world might end one day with a pandemic."
- Countries' preparedness levels called into question
Starting over four years ago, COVID-19-a respiratory disease that still haunts the globe, although it has lost intensity-so far claimed over 7 million lives, according to World Health Organization (WHO) figures. The pandemic exposed the vulnerability of health care systems even in developed countries, and the current mpox outbreak raised questions about whether the governments and international institutions have learned their lessons for new crises in the future.
"Scientists are prepared, but the politics not at all," said Lelievre, explaining that no precautions were taken for mpox beforehand.
"It is like nothing was learned, and there we have the WHO that declares a global emergency (on mpox last month). We need to wake up. All the governments are waking up now," he stressed, decrying how political institutions only have short-term vision, and the lack of communication and financial possibilities make it harder to tackle the issues.