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June 9, 2006|Volume 34, Number 30|Five-Week Issue


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Animals may provide warning of
bioterrorist attack, say researchers

Pets, wildlife or livestock could act as sentinels to provide early warning for humans and could help identify many ongoing exposure risks for certain bioterrorism agents, researchers at the School of Medicine have found in a study published in Emerging Infectious Diseases.

"Recent events including the emergence of West Nile Virus and Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza are a reminder that physicians and public health professionals need to pay attention to disease events in animal populations," says lead author Dr. Peter Rabinowitz, associate professor of internal medicine and occupational medicine at the School of Medicine. "In the event of a bioterrorist attack animals may be able to provide some warning, and it will be very important to coordinate human health and animal health responses."

Rabinowitz and his colleagues conducted a systematic review of the scientific literature from 1966 to 2005 to determine whether animals could provide early warning of a bioterrorism attack, serve as markers for ongoing exposure risk, and amplify or propagate a bioterrorism outbreak.

The study found that animals could provide an early warning to humans if clinical signs could be detected before human illness emerged or soon enough to allow preventive measures to be initiated. If a released biological agent persists in the environment (soil, water or air), active surveillance for sporadic illness in animals could help detect ongoing exposure risks, say the scientists, noting that the geographic pattern of sick or dead animals could also be an indicator for the persistence of a biological threat.

According to Rabinowitz, animal populations such as wild birds, commercially shipped livestock, and animals involved in the local or international pet trade could play a role in the maintenance and spread of an epidemic attributable to an intentional release of a biological agent. "Detecting the agent in such mobile populations could therefore signal the ongoing spread of the agent and provide an opportunity for interventions to prevent further spread," he says.

Rabinowitz advises the public health infrastructure to look beyond passive surveillance of acute animal disease events, and to build capacity for active surveillance and intervention efforts to detect and control ongoing outbreaks of disease in domestic and wild animal populations.

The study was part of a National Library of Medicine funded project to create an online database of scientific evidence regarding animals as sentinels of human environmental health hazards. For further information, see project website at http://canarydatabase.org.

Other authors on the study were Zimra Gordon, Daniel Chudnov, Matthew Wilcox, Lynda Odofin, Ann Liu and Joshua Dein.

-- By Karen Peart


T H I SW E E K ' SS T O R I E S

PBS news anchor elected as trustee

Ceremony formally marks Rose Center opening

New Peabody hall offering high-tech lessons about Earth and space

Scientists believe that green tea may be key to 'Asian paradox'

COMMENCEMENT 2006

ENDOWED PROFESSORSHIPS


New exhibit asks: What did Shakespeare really look like?

Samples from ocean floor at the North Pole yield clues . . .



MEDICAL SCHOOL NEWS


Arts & Ideas festival adds a dash of New Orleans spice

Art & Architecture Library taking up temporary residence on Crown Street

Forum explores governmental budgetary processes in China

Library events celebrate aviator and author Anne Morrow Lindberg

Making the Grade



Uncovering Ingrained Attitudes About Obesity

Artist's exhibit at Slifka Center will examine complexity of faith

Jaroslav Pelikan, renowned scholar of church history

Event will bring bellringers from near and far to the Yale campus

Gigantic balloon creatures to invade Hall of Dinosaurs

Celebrated performer to teach summer flute institute

Drama production will highlight work by New Haven students

Reading aloud

Campus Notes


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