id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt cord-352798-rb2ggonx Chaber, Anne-Lise The Era of Human-Induced Diseases 2017-11-21 .txt text/plain 1995 103 41 Human-Induced Disease as the label for diseases-both infectious and non-infectious-caused by human activities and their environmental impact emphasizes the role of the human in disease transmission and could serve reshaping our approach to disease management and prevention. Humans share most of the viruses, bacteria, and fungus with the rest of the animal kingdom, and thus it should come as no surprise that zoonotic pathogens were the cause of more than 65% of emergent infectious disease events in the last 60 years, with 75% of these originating in wild fauna (Keusch et al. Anthropogenic environmental change leads to the emergence of infectious diseases in wildlife (Daszak et al. It estimated that the annual economic cost of illness and premature mortality linked to air pollution is $3600 billion (OECD 2014)-a figure that is 85% of the world's annual public budget for human health. Anthropogenic environmental change and the emergence of infectious diseases in wildlife ./cache/cord-352798-rb2ggonx.txt ./txt/cord-352798-rb2ggonx.txt