id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt cord-338484-a8jmc8lq Wu, Tong Economic growth, urbanization, globalization, and the risks of emerging infectious diseases in China: A review 2016-08-04 .txt text/plain 6672 354 51 Assessment of the risks posed by zoonotic diseases requires an understanding of how socioeconomic, and ecological conditions affect two phenomena: emergence (the irruption of a pathogen originating in wildlife or livestock into human populations) and spread (the transmission of disease among both animals and people). In particular, the emergence of HPAI strains has become more likely in southern China, where the growth of an increasingly affluent urban population has driven an increase in poultry production and land-use changes that brings humans, domesticated animals, and wildlife into closer contact (Davis 2005; Wallace et al. The global infectious disease risks created by China's trade growth stem from the fact that international markets facilitate the movement of pathogens around the world as freely as commodities and people (Perrings et al. Mitigating the infectious disease risks of climate change-both for vectorborne and directly transmissible zoonoses-requires a deeper understanding of how it interacts with urbanization and globalization to alter the vulnerability of human populations (Tong et al. ./cache/cord-338484-a8jmc8lq.txt ./txt/cord-338484-a8jmc8lq.txt