Environment & Energy
Related: About this forum2014 - The Year In Pathogens (Not Just Ebola, You Know . . . )
The spread of the Ebola virus in West Africa dominated headlines during the second half of the year. To date, more than 18,000 people have been infected with Ebola, and nearly 7,000 have died, according to the World Health Organization (WHO). While grim, these statistics are lower than the dire predictions released by the WHO and the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) earlier this year. And a recent epidemiological analysis suggested that the number of unreported cases is lower than previous estimates.
In September, the United Nations Security Council declared the Ebola epidemic a threat to international peace and security, spurring large-scale international aid efforts, which have helped to curb the spread of the disease, particularly in Liberia. But the outbreak continues to surge in Sierra Leone, and there has been a troubling spread in Guineas capitol city, CDC director Thomas Frieden said in a statement this week (December 22). Weve got a long way to go and this is no time to relax our grip on the response.
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Hundreds of MERS cases have been reported to the WHO this year; as of June 11, the organization had recorded more than 300 deaths from the virus since 2012. In May, the WHO announced that there is no evidence of human-to-human transmission of the virus, but urged a ramping up of research efforts and increased infection control measures. Scientists at Colorado State University recently reported that dromedary camels can become infected and shed large amounts of virus through their noses, confirming camels as a MERS reservoir and informing the development of a potential vaccine for camels. Earlier this year, a group of investigators successfully cultured the virus in monkey cells, while another team detected human antibodies that recognize it. A third group of researchers identified a small molecule that interferes with the replication of MERS and other coronaviruses within specialized vesicles.
This fall, enterovirus D68 (EV-D68) caused serious respiratory illness in more than 1,000 peoplemainly childrenin the U.S., according to the CDC. While the spread of the virus appears to be slowing, the reasons for its re-emergence this year remain unclear. Some answers may come from the viruss genome, which was sequenced by researchers at Washington University in St. Louis; the information will also guide the development of new diagnostics, according to the studys authors.
Poliovirus re-emerged in Pakistan this year, infecting at least 200 people. Mistrust and sabotage of vaccination workers have contributed to the outbreak. Global vaccination campaigns have made tremendous progress toward eliminating the virus, but infections have also cropped up in Syria, Cameroon, Afghanistan, Iraq, and Equatorial Guinea, causing the WHO to declare a public health emergency in May. The WHO is now supplementing the oral polio vaccine, a live attenuated virus, with boosters of the inactivated polio vaccine. In August, researchers reported that this approach improves childrens immune responses against the virus.
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http://www.the-scientist.com/?articles.view/articleNo/41776/title/The-Year-in-Pathogens/