Cheap air travel 'is spreading deadly diseases' - Telegraph
Extract:
"People are at greater risk of contracting potentially lethal infectious diseases because of the boom in international air travel, the World Health Organisation (WHO) warned today.
New diseases are emerging at the "historically unprecedented rate of one per year", and failures in international co-operation are putting lives at risk, according to a new report.
Centuries-old threats such as influenza, malaria and tuberculosis are thriving due to mutations and rising resistance, while deadly new diseases threaten worldwide epidemics.
"It would be extremely naive and complacent to assume that there will not be another disease like AIDS, another Ebola, another SARS, sooner or later," the report warns.
The WHO is calling on countries to report potentially dangerous health emergencies more quickly, and be more willing to share scientific knowledge of new infections.
The report highlighted two recent failures of international intelligence sharing that could have put lives at risk.
Earlier this year, American officials tracked the movements of a US lawyer believed to have a highly dangerous form of tuberculosis as he travelled around Europe, but failed to inform the WHO or the countries he visited."
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Thursday, August 23, 2007
Cheap air travel 'is spreading deadly infectious diseases'
Posted by Willow at 2:19 pm
Labels: air travel, epidemics, infectious diseases, tuberculosis, World Health Organisation
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