Factors: Introduction - Defining the Danger
- Emerging infections: Newly appeared or rapidly increasing incidence/geographic range (e.g., COVID-19, Zika).
- Re-emerging infections: Previously controlled, now increasing (e.g., Tuberculosis, Measles).
- Deliberately emerging: Bioterrorism agents (e.g., Anthrax).
- Global impact: Significant morbidity & mortality (e.g., HIV, Influenza, Ebola).
⭐ The majority of emerging infectious diseases are zoonotic in origin (animal to human).
Factors: Microbial Adaptation - Pathogen's Playbook
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Genetic Roulette: Key to pathogen evolution.
- Mutation: Point changes; antigenic drift (e.g., Influenza).
- Recombination: Exchange of genetic segments.
- Reassortment: Mixing of segmented genomes; antigenic shift (e.g., Influenza). 📌 Shift = Sudden, Severe.
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Antimicrobial Resistance (AMR) Development:
- Mechanisms: Enzyme inactivation (e.g., β-lactamases), target modification, ↓ uptake, ↑ efflux.
- Spread: Horizontal Gene Transfer (plasmids, transposons).
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Pathogen Power-ups:
- ↑ Virulence factors: Toxins, adhesins, capsules, immune evasion mechanisms.
- ↑ Transmissibility: Enhanced host-to-host spread, environmental stability.
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Zoonotic Spillover & Animal Reservoirs:
- Reservoirs: Bats (Coronaviruses, Nipah), Rodents (Hantaviruses), Birds (Avian Influenza).
- Spillover events: Pathogen jumps from animal to human, often via an intermediate host or direct contact.
⭐ Influenza A: antigenic drift (seasonal epidemics), antigenic shift (pandemics via reassortment).
Zoonotic Spillover Process:
Factors: Human Behavior - Our Influence Amplified
- Demographics & Mobility:
- ↑ Population growth, density, and unplanned urbanization intensify pathogen transmission.
- Human migration (refugees, economic migrants) and displacement introduce pathogens to naive populations.
- Lifestyle Choices:
- High-risk sexual practices (e.g., HIV).
- Intravenous drug use (e.g., HCV).
- Food habits: consumption of bushmeat or raw/undercooked food (zoonotic risks).
- Altered Ecosystems:
- Encroachment into wildlife habitats ↑ human-animal contact.
- Exotic pet trade and intensive livestock farming create spillover opportunities.
- Globalization:
- Rapid international travel and trade act as vectors for swift global pathogen spread.
⭐ Air travel can disseminate pathogens worldwide within 24-48 hours, as demonstrated by SARS and COVID-19.

Factors: Eco-Changes - Environment's Eruption
- Climate Change:
- Alters vector (mosquito, tick) distribution, density & breeding seasons.
- Enhances pathogen survival, replication & virulence.
- Modifies host immunity & susceptibility.
- Land Use Changes:
- Deforestation: ↑ vector-human contact (e.g., Malaria, Leishmaniasis, Nipah).
- Intensive agriculture (irrigation, livestock): creates new vector habitats.
- Urbanization, dam building, mining: disrupt ecosystems, alter water flow.
- Natural Disasters: (Floods, earthquakes, hurricanes)
- Damage infrastructure: poor sanitation, contaminated water sources.
- Population displacement & overcrowding: ↑ disease transmission risk.
- Water & Food Ecology:
- Changes in aquatic environments: e.g., harmful algal blooms (HABs).
- Contamination of food & water sources by pathogens or their toxins.
⭐ Deforestation is linked to increased emergence of diseases like Malaria and Leishmaniasis by altering vector and reservoir host ecology.

Factors: System Failures - Societal Setbacks
- Public Health Infrastructure Breakdown:
- Reduced surveillance & inadequate response.
- Poor sanitation & hygiene standards.
- Failed vector control programs (e.g., for mosquitoes).
- Weak Healthcare Systems:
- Deficient infection control practices.
- Limited diagnostic capacity & resources.
- Restricted access to essential treatments.
- Antimicrobial Resistance (AMR): Accelerated by widespread, inappropriate antimicrobial use in humans & agriculture.
- Socio-political & Economic Factors: Poverty, social inequality, conflict, war, political instability.
- Globalization: Increased international travel & interconnected global food supply chains.
- Bioterrorism: Potential for deliberate release of pathogens.

⭐ The decline in childhood vaccination coverage is a major factor in the re-emergence of diseases like measles.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Genetic changes in pathogens (e.g., antigenic shift/drift) drive emergence.
- Human demographics (urbanization, ↑population) and behavior (travel, IV drug use) are crucial.
- Ecological disturbances like deforestation and climate change promote zoonotic transmission.
- Globalization (international travel, food trade) enables rapid pandemic spread.
- Weak public health infrastructure (poor surveillance, ↓vaccination) increases susceptibility.
- Intensive agriculture and food production systems can be sources of new pathogens.
- Antimicrobial resistance contributes to re-emergence and difficult-to-treat infections.
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