Surveillance of Zoonotic Infectious Disease Transmitted by Small Companion Animals - - Emerging Infectious Disease journal - CDC
Online Report
Surveillance of Zoonotic Infectious Disease Transmitted by Small Companion Animals
Article Contents
- Companion Animals
- Zoonotic Infections in Companion Animals
- Human Zoonotic Disease Surveillance
- Surveillance of Zoonoses in Production and Wild Animals
- Surveillance of Zoonoses in Small Companion Animals
- Opportunities for Small Companion Animal Infectious Disease Surveillance
- Existing Schemes
- Recommendations for the Future
- Acknowledgment
- References
- Table
- Suggested Citation
Abstract
The One Health paradigm for global health recognizes that most new human infectious diseases will emerge from animal reservoirs. Little consideration has been given to the known and potential zoonotic infectious diseases of small companion animals. Cats and dogs closely share the domestic environment with humans and have the potential to act as sources and sentinels of a wide spectrum of zoonotic infections. This report highlights the lack of a coordinated global surveillance scheme that monitors disease in these species and makes a case for the necessity of developing a strategy to implement such surveillance.A key goal of the evolving One Health paradigm includes surveillance of infectious diseases in domestic and wild animals to anticipate emergence of new zoonoses and protect humans. To achieve this goal, it is essential that global resources be allocated for more effective disease surveillance and reporting schemes that incorporate environmental, human, and veterinary health professionals. Many systems are in place nationally or globally to monitor human and production animal (and to a lesser extent, wild animal) disease (2), but major gaps in surveillance remain, particularly the lack of a surveillance infrastructure that includes companion animals.
From a One Health perspective, companion animals can serve as sources of zoonotic infections, as intermediate hosts between wildlife reservoirs and humans, or as sentinel or proxy species for emerging disease surveillance (3). The aims of this review are to define and quantify the role of companion animals in the human domestic and peridomestic environment, highlight the major companion animal zoonoses and the potential for emergence of new human infections transmitted from these species, emphasize the lack of global infectious disease surveillance in these species against the current background of human and production animal surveillance, and suggest how to address this major One Health deficiency in the future.
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