Authors
Ronan F Arthur, Emily S Gurley, Henrik Salje, Laura SP Bloomfield, James H Jones
Publication date
2017/5/5
Source
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
Volume
372
Issue
1719
Pages
20160454
Publisher
The Royal Society
Description
Human factors, including contact structure, movement, impact on the environment and patterns of behaviour, can have significant influence on the emergence of novel infectious diseases and the transmission and amplification of established ones. As anthropogenic climate change alters natural systems and global economic forces drive land-use and land-cover change, it becomes increasingly important to understand both the ecological and social factors that impact infectious disease outcomes for human populations. While the field of disease ecology explicitly studies the ecological aspects of infectious disease transmission, the effects of the social context on zoonotic pathogen spillover and subsequent human-to-human transmission are comparatively neglected in the literature. The social sciences encompass a variety of disciplines and frameworks for understanding infectious diseases; however, here we focus …
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