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Human vs. animal outbreaks of the 2009 swine-origin H1N1 influenza A epidemic

机译:2009年源自猪的H1N1甲型流感的人类与动物暴发

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摘要

The majority of emerging infectious diseases are zoonotic in origin, including recently emerging influenza viruses such as the 2009 swine-origin H1N1 influenza A epidemic. The epidemic that year affected both human and animal populations as it spread globally. In fact, before the end of 2009, 14 different countries reported H1N1 infected swine. In order to better understand the zoonotic nature of the epidemic and the relationship between human and animal disease surveillance data streams, we compared 2009 reports of H1N1 infection to define the temporal relationship between reported cases in animals and humans. Generally, human cases preceded animal cases at a country-level, supporting the potential of H1N1 infection to be a "reverse zoonosis", and the value of integrating human and animal disease report data.
机译:大多数新出现的传染病起源于人畜共患病,包括最近出现的流感病毒,例如2009年源自猪的H1N1甲型流感。当年的流行病在全球蔓延,影响到人类和动物。实际上,在2009年底之前,有14个不同的国家报告了H1N1感染的猪。为了更好地了解该疾病的人畜共患病性质以及人与动物疾病监控数据流之间的关系,我们比较了2009年H1N1感染的报告,以定义动物和人类报告病例之间的时间关系。通常,在国家一级,人类感染的病例先于动物感染的病例,这证明了H1N1感染有可能成为“反向人畜共患病”,并且整合人畜疾病报告数据的价值。

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