Abstract

BackgroundIntensified food production, i.e. agricultural intensification and industrialized livestock operations may have adverse effects on human health and promote disease emergence via numerous mechanisms resulting in either direct impacts on humans or indirect impacts related to animal and environmental health. For example, while biodiversity is intentionally decreased in intensive food production systems, the consequential decrease in resilience in these systems may in turn bear increased health risks. However, quantifying these risks remains challenging, even if individual intensification measures are examined separately. Yet, this is an urgent task, especially in rapidly developing areas of the world with few regulations on intensification measures, such as in the Greater Mekong Subregion (GMS).MethodsWe systematically searched the databases PubMed and Scopus for recent studies conducted on the association between agricultural (irrigation, fertilization, pesticide application) and livestock (feed additives, animal crowding) intensification measures and human health risks in the GMS. The search terms used were iteratively modified to maximize the number of retrieved studies with relevant quantitative data.ResultsWe found that alarmingly little research has been done in this regard, considering the level of environmental contamination with pesticides, livestock infection with antibiotic resistant pathogens and disease vector proliferation in irrigated agroecosystems reported in the retrieved studies. In addition, each of the studies identified focused on specific aspects of intensified food production and there have been no efforts to consolidate the health risks from the simultaneous exposures to the range of hazardous chemicals utilized.ConclusionsWhile some of the studies identified already reported environmental contamination bearing considerable health risks for local people, at the current state of research the actual consolidated risk from regional intensification measures cannot be estimated. Efforts in this area of research need to be rapidly and considerably scaled up, keeping pace with the current level of regional intensification and the speed of pesticide and drug distribution to facilitate the development of agriculture related policies for regional health promotion.

Highlights

  • The Greater Mekong Subregion (GMS), founded by Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar, Thailand, Vietnam and Yunnan Province of China in 1992, is a bloc of rapidly developing and cooperatively linked economies that geographically share the Mekong River Basin [1]

  • The objectives of this systematic review are to determine if individual measures of intensified food production in the GMS have been shown to cause quantifiable negative impacts on human health, to make known risks associated with current regional intensification more assessable, and to Methods References for this review were identified through searches of the databases PubMed and Scopus in JulyAugust 2014

  • Carrique-Mas et al [68] investigated the risk of Campylobacter infections of pigs and poultry held in operations of small to large size, in the Mekong delta region of Vietnam and identified animal age as a primary risk factor for Campylobacter infection in chickens and pigs, with a high rate of immunity in older animals. This systematic literature review revealed substantial knowledge gaps regarding the quantitative effects of intensified food production on human health and disease emergence in the GMS

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The Greater Mekong Subregion (GMS), founded by Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar, Thailand, Vietnam and Yunnan Province of China in 1992, is a bloc of rapidly developing and cooperatively linked economies that geographically share the Mekong River Basin [1]. Intensified food production aims for higher yields per area through an increase in inputs and operational efficiency. While biodiversity is intentionally decreased in intensive food production systems, the consequential decrease in resilience in these systems may in turn bear increased health risks. Quantifying these risks remains challenging, even if individual intensification measures are examined separately. This is an urgent task, especially in rapidly developing areas of the world with few regulations on intensification measures, such as in the Greater Mekong Subregion (GMS)

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call