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Transcript
Biological
Hazards
Environmental Science Unit
7.2
The Environment’s Role in
Disease



We have altered our environment in ways
that encourage diseases to spread
Pathogens – organisms or viruses that cause
disease
How diseases spread

Air



Ex: tuberculosis, whooping cough
Drinking water that contains the pathogen
Secondary host transmission
Ex: mosquito
 Host – organism in which a pathogen lives


Most infectious deadly diseases:

Respiratory infections – 4.3 million deaths/yr


Diarrheal diseases – 2.2 million deaths/yr





Ex: pneumonia, flu, whooping cough
Ex: cholera, typhus, typhoid, dysentery
AIDS – 2 million deaths/yr
Tuberculosis (bacteria) – 1.5 million deaths/yr
Malaria – 900,000 deaths/yr
Childhood diseases – 800,000 deaths/yr

Ex: measles, diphtheria
Infectious Disease
 Most
infectious diseases are transmitted
through water


In developing countries the local water
supply is used for drinking, washing, and
sewage disposal
Vector – organism that transmits a
pathogen or parasite to another organism
 Ex:
mosquito
 Cholera


Deadliest waterborne diseases are from
water polluted w/ human feces
Cholera and dysentery cause diarrhea and
vomiting, which leads to dehydration
 Most
 Malaria
infant deaths worldwide
is caused by parasitic protists and
is transmitted by a bite from infected
female mosquitoes
Environmental Change and
Disease
 We
alter the environment to make it more
suitable for pathogens to live and
reproduce
 Soil erosion
 Parasites are spread through soil
contaminated with feces

Hookworm is caused by walking barefoot
on soil contaminated w/ human and
animal feces
 Antibiotic

resistance
Antibiotics are fed to livestock each year to
speed their growth
 Salmonella,
E. coli, etc. evolve resistance to
antibiotics and spread through contaminated
meat

We use enormous amounts of antibiotics to
treat human illnesses
 1979
– 6% of pneumonia strains resistant
 1989 – 44% of pneumonia strains resistant



Some strains of staphylococcus aureus are
resistant to all antibiotics except one
Some organisms are resistant to ALL
available antibiotics
Over-prescription of antibiotics by doctors
 Vector-borne



diseases
Malaria was common in U.S. before
mosquito control
Mosquitoes have evolved resistance to
most pesticides
Spread growth regulators that prevent
mosquito larvae from maturing into adults
 Emerging
viruses are those that were
unknown 100 years ago



Ex: AIDS is caused by HIV
Main defense against viral diseases is
vaccination
Vaccinations are very specific

Cross-species transfers – pathogens that have
moved from one species to another


HIV, West-Nile virus
Hemorrhagic fever




Herbicides were sprayed on crops in Argentina
Killed native grasses and allowed other plants to
invade farmland
Attracted rodents carrying virus for hemorrhagic fever
Flu spreads from humans to animals and back to
humans

Outbreak of new, virulent strain is predicted to be
greatest threat to human health