AI Article Synopsis

  • Urban wild boar populations in Barcelona are increasing and pose risks for zoonotic pathogens like hepatitis E virus (HEV) and antimicrobial-resistant bacteria (AMR-CAMP), along with non-zoonotic threats like African swine fever virus (ASFV).
  • An Agent-Based Model (ABM) was developed to predict exposure risks and found that approximately 0.79% of the human population could be exposed to HEV and 0.80% to AMR-CAMP, highlighting the role of boar faeces in pathogen transmission.
  • The study emphasizes the need for collaboration among animal, public, and environmental health sectors using a One Health approach to mitigate risks associated with the coexistence of urban wildlife and human

Article Abstract

Wild boar (WB, ) populations are increasing in urban areas, posing an epidemiological risk for zoonotic pathogens such as hepatitis E virus (HEV) and antimicrobial-resistant (AMR-CAMP), as well as non-zoonotic pathogens such as African swine fever virus (ASFV). An epidemiological extension of a validated Agent-Based Model (ABM) was developed to assess the one-year epidemiological scenarios of HEV, AMR-CAMP, and ASFV in the synurbic WB-human interface in Barcelona, Spain. The predicted citizen exposure was similar for HEV and AMR-CAMP, at 0.79% and 0.80% of the human population in Barcelona, respectively, despite AMR-CAMP being more prevalent in the WB population than HEV. This suggests a major role of faeces in pathogen transmission to humans in urban areas, resulting in a non-negligible public health risk. The ASFV model predicted that the entire WB population would be exposed to the virus through carcasses (87.6%) or direct contact (12.6%) in 51-71 days after the first case, with an outbreak lasting 71-124 days and reducing the initial WB population by 95%. The ABM predictions are useful for animal and public health risk assessments and to support risk-based decision-making. The study underscores the need for interdisciplinary cooperation among animal, public, and environmental health managers, and the implementation of the One Health approach to address the epidemiological and public health risks posed by the synurbization of WB in urban areas. The spatially explicit epidemiological predictions of the ABM can be adapted to other diseases and scenarios at the wildlife-livestock-human interface.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10372376PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.onehlt.2023.100598DOI Listing

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