Abstract

Climate change can have a complex impact that also influences human and animal health. For example, climate change alters the conditions for pathogens and vectors of zoonotic diseases. Signs of this are the increasing spread of the West Nile and Usutu viruses and the establishment of new vector species, such as specific mosquito and tick species, in Europe and other parts of the world. With these changes come new challenges for maintaining human and animal health. This paper reports on an analysis of the literature focused on a bibliometric analysis of the Scopus database and VOSviewer software for creating visualization maps which identifies the zoonotic health risks for humans and animals caused by climate change. The sources retained for the analysis totaled 428 and different thresholds (N) were established for each item varying from N 5 to 10. The main findings are as follows: First, published documents increased in 2009–2015 peaking in 2020. Second, the primary sources have changed since 2018, partly attributable to the increase in human health concerns due to human-to-human transmission. Third, the USA, the UK, Canada, Australia, Italy, and Germany perform most zoonosis research. For instance, sixty documents and only 17 countries analyzed for co-authorship analysis met the threshold led by the USA; the top four author keywords were “climate change”, “zoonosis”, “epidemiology”, and “one health;” the USA, the UK, Germany, and Spain led the link strength (inter-collaboration); the author keywords showed that 37 out of the 1023 keywords met the threshold, and the authors’ keyword’s largest node of the bibliometric map contains the following: infectious diseases, emerging diseases, disease ecology, one health, surveillance, transmission, and wildlife. Finally, zoonotic diseases, which were documented in the literature in the past, have evolved, especially during the years 2010–2015, as evidenced by the sharp augmentation of publications addressing ad-hoc events and peaking in 2020 with the COVID-19 outbreak.

Highlights

  • Introduction“Between animal and human medicine, there is no dividing line, nor should there be”

  • Closer contact between humans and animals may lead to the spread of more viral or bacterial infections [2]

  • We performed a bibliometric analysis by focusing on the quantitative appraisal of the published literature regarding zoonotic health risks on human and animal health due to climate change effects

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Summary

Introduction

“Between animal and human medicine, there is no dividing line, nor should there be”. Wildlife, humans and their domesticated pets, and the environment are closely connected via their various roles in maintaining and spreading contagious maladies. For a long time, probably unreasonably, wildlife has been “accused” of being the source of zoonotic diseases among humans [1]. Closer contact between humans and animals may lead to the spread of more viral or bacterial infections [2].

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