Scientists Warn: More Devastating Epidemics Could Come



[ad_1]

The number of epidemics has tripled every decade since the 1980s, with more than two-thirds of new infections coming from animals and transmitted to humans from there, the news channel reports.

“If you cut down trees and cut down the forest, you destroy the natural habitat of these species. However, these species not only disappear. Rather, we simply mosaic their habitats and position them closer to ours, and houses attract insects, sheds attract bats, “Roger Frutos, a professor at the University of Montpellier in France, told CNBC.

According to Frutos, there is basically little chance of an animal infecting a human, but because human and animal habitats have gotten closer to each other, the chances of infection have increased significantly. According to some researchers, there are 3,000 types of coronaviruses in bats alone that can potentially be caught by humans.

Earth Smiley Evans, an epidemiologist at the University of California, has a similar opinion.

“Building our houses on the edge of forests, destroying wildlife habitats and moving animals to smaller areas, making public disease more likely to spread to humans,” he said.

Protecting habitats and our world is a human health problem, not just an environmental problem

The scientist added.

Scott Weaver, a professor at the University of Texas, says there is a serious risk that climate change will affect more countries where medical care is not very high, such as Latin American countries or Southeast Asia. He added that many infections, such as West Nile virus, spread much more easily in warmer climates, and global warming leads the water to the virus factory.

“Hopefully, due to the Covid-19 pandemic, people will pay more attention to scientists who warn about the risks of such infections,” added the professor.

Cover image: Shutterstock



[ad_2]