학술논문

Direct and Indirect Social Drivers and Impacts of Vector-Borne Diseases
Document Type
Chapter
Author
Source
Population Biology of Vector-Borne Diseases, 2020, ill.
Subject
social drivers
social-ecological context
arbovirus emergence
intervention
implementation
natural disasters
Ecuador
Haiti
Europe
neglected tropical diseases (NTDs)
Disease Ecology and Epidemiology
Animal Pathology and Diseases
Language
English
Abstract
Vector borne diseases (VBDs) are often seen by the highly developed nations of the world as an issue of poor tropical countries. While framing the problem this way—through the paradigm of a poverty-trap—may leverage aid and motivate political will toward disease control, it misses a wide range of socio-political contexts both driving, and driven by, vector borne diseases. In this chapter, we present a series of global vignettes, to illustrate different facets of the broad remit of social drivers and interactions with VBDs. We approach the urban social-ecological context in Latin America and the Caribbean, impacts and aftermath of natural disasters such as earthquakes and tropical storms, struggles with trust in intervention implementation in Haiti, and drivers and impacts of ruminant arbovirus emergence events in Europe. We conclude that incorporating an understanding of social context, including political history and cultural perceptions, is a key part of VBD research and intervention practice.

Online Access