COVID‑19: A Veterinary and One Health Perspective

Nagendra R. Hegde

Abstract


Interface with animals has been responsible for the occur‑ rence of a major proportion of human diseases for the past several decades. Recent outbreaks of respiratory, haemorrhagic, encephalitic, arthropod-borne and other viral diseases have underlined the role of ani‑ mals in the transmission of pathogens to humans. The on-going coro‑ navirus disease-2019 (COVID-19) pandemic is one among them and is thought to have originated from bats and jumped to humans through an intermediate animal host. Indeed, the aetiology, severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), can infect and cause disease in cats, ferrets and minks, as well as be transmitted from one animal to another. The seriousness of the pandemic along with the zoonotic origin of the virus has been a red alert on the critical need for collaboration and cooperation among human and animal health professionals, as well as stakeholders from various other disciplines that study planetary health parameters and the well-being of the biosphere. It is therefore imminent that One Health principles are applied across the board for human infec‑ tious diseases so that we can be better prepared for future zoonotic dis‑ ease outbreaks and pandemics.

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