[Marxism] Infected planet

Louis Proyect :

Infected Planet
By Stan Cox, AlterNet
Posted on March 21, 2006, Printed on March 22, 2006
http://www.alternet.org/story/33703/

When Michael Crichton's first novel, "The Andromeda Strain," was published 
in 1969, it was scary but also strangely reassuring. If some new disease 
were to threaten humanity with a deadly pandemic, it seemed, the microbe 
responsible would come from another planet. The march of medical progress 
appeared to have terrestrial germs on the run.

Twenty-five years later, when Laurie Garrett published her nonfiction 
bestseller, "The Coming Plague," people were waking up to the fact that our 
own abused planet is perfectly capable of spawning a steady stream of new 
diseases without any help from alien worlds.

Today, old familiar scourges like tuberculosis, malaria, measles, and 
diarrhea -- and a newer one, AIDS -- are the world's biggest killers, but 
they've been joined by a host of newcomers. Indeed, one could get the 
impression that each year brings a new disease. That's because it does.

Mark Woolhouse, chair of Infectious Disease Epidemiology at the University 
of Edinburgh, has counted 38 new pathogens (disease-causing biological 
agents) that have moved into the human population from other animal species 
in just the past 25 years. In a presentation at the annual meeting of the 
American Association for the Advancement of Science last month, Woolhouse 
noted that we're under assault not only from those novel species, but also 
from new genetic variants of pathogens that have been with us for a long
time.

A recent tally identified 1,415 disease-causing microbes in humans, 
including bacteria, viruses, fungi and parasitic worms. We share fully 61 
percent of those pathogens with other animal species. Of the total, 175 
cause "emerging diseases" -- ones not known until recently in humans. Of 
those, 75 percent came out of other animals to invade Homo sapiens.

The impact of species-jumping pathogens varies. Hendra virus moved from 
fruit bats to horses in 1994 and is known to have killed a total of only 
three people. Since the 1970s, the Ebola virus has incited some horrifying 
outbreaks that, so far, have failed to blow up into epidemics. Influenza 
viruses usually cause a lower mortality rate but hit far more people; 
currently, an H5N1 "bird flu" strain threatens to break that pattern by 
staging an encore of the 1918-19 killer flu pandemic that killed 50 million 
to 100 million people. HIV/AIDS is both chronically widespread and deadly, 
now accounting for almost a fourth of infectious disease deaths.

But have "emerging" species-jumping diseases actually been with us for 
millenia, identified only when medical research achieves sufficient 
precision in detecting and identifying microbes? Durland Fish, professor at 
the Yale School of Public Health, says that better research is part of it, 
but there still appears to be a faster rate of disease appearance these 
days. He told me, "Dr. Woolhouse makes an interesting point: that 'emerging 
disease' is a new concept but a very old process. Humans have always 
acquired new diseases." We're being hit more frequently today than in 
previous eras, he says, partly because "transportation, trade, human 
population growth, and environmental change are going on at unprecedented 
rates."

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