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Nov. 10, 2006 -- Diseases spread by birds, mosquitoes, cattle, and other animals are a growing problem for humans -- affecting millions of people a year, according to a new study.
The recent outbreaks of bird flubird flu and mad cow disease have raised awareness of the danger of diseases spread by animals to humans, known as zoonotic viruses, the researchers say.
Although those two new diseases have affected a relatively small number of people, more common zoonotic diseases like dengue fever and rabies kill tens of thousands of people each year worldwide and appear to be on the rise, the researchers write.
For example, during the study period from 2000 to 2005:
"There has been a global resurgence in the dengue virus -- which is transmitted between monkeys in the jungle by the mosquitoes that feed on them," says researcher Jonathan Heeney, in a news release.
"The cycle can move into nearby urban areas, where it can then be transmitted from person to person by mosquitoes," says Heeney, chairman of the department of virology at the Biomedical Primate Research Centre in the Netherlands. "This has been attributed to regional population growth around large cities, increased transportation, and failing public control measures."
Even zoonotic viruses for which there are preventive vaccines -- like yellow fever -- continue to pose a threat and affect an estimated 200,000 people, according to the World Health Organization.