Indigenous Environmental Issues
Ebola is increasingly becoming a salient concern due to the fact that recent outbreaks that have highlighted the risks that are associated with the disease to individual health, as well as having also highlighted the ability to the disease to spread and threaten the public health of whole societies across the globe. Given the importance of the topic, researchers have worked to attempt to determine the specific causes that allow for the spread of this disease. The research has spurred many scientific debates and theories that have arisen to explain the transmittance of Ebola. Various relevant factors have been identified as possible causal links to the spread of the disease such as deforestation and climate change.
Research Question
Ebola is a communicable disease that has the potential to spread quickly and has the potential to devastate the state of public health in virtually every population on the planet. From a public health perspective, as well as from countless other perspectives, communicable diseases have the potential to directly or indirectly impact the quality of life for all humanity. Therefore, this research will focus on the state of the current scientific literature attempt to identify the extent that environmental factors influence the spread of Ebola?
This question is relevant for environmentalists as well as the medical profession, because the spread of the Ebola virus is a great cause for concern as they predict that another such outbreak cannot be ruled out. they claim that the risks of the outbreak had been rising steadily over the last decade. The medical fraternity now claims that the risks of the outbreak were so high that it had become almost inevitable and was almost predictable (Davies, 2015). The scope of this study will be limited to secondary research that multi-disciplinary investigation that looks at the spread of Ebola from different scientific perspectives.
Literature Review
To understand the influence that the environment has on the spread of disease in general, and Ebola in specific, the changes in the state of environment should first be mentioned. According to Porter and Brown, as much as 60% of the global deforestation is caused by the conversion of forests for the purpose of subsistence and for commercial agriculture (Chasek, Downie & Brown, 2014). Commercial logging, on the other hand, results in estimated 20 to 25% of deforestation every year. Other human activities for commercial purposes like mining, planting of cash crops, cattle ranching and construction of infrastructure such as dams are thought to be the reason behind the remaining 15 to 20% of the deforestation globally. The marketing policies o various governments in Africa reflects their focus on the planting of cash crops instead of food crops and this focus or rate of planting is much more compared to the global average.
The United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) claims that deforestation in Africa is happening at twice the world rate (Reuters, 2008). During the 1980s, 1990s and early 200s, the highest percentage of tropical forests was lost in Africa according to the FAO. This organization claims that just 22.8% of the moist forests in West Africa remain (http://news.mongabay.com, 2006). The deforestation in Africa, especially in sub-Saharan Africa, is considered a major problem and a cause of concern for environmentalists as well as for the local population. However, this problem has also been identified to be one of the contributing factors that has the potential to contribute to the rapid spread of the Ebola, the virus that killed thousands of people in Africa recently and spread to at least half of the world's geographic regions.
The fruit bats are the hosts of the Ebola virus (Ginsberg, 2014). Many scientists have postulated that deforestation could have been the responsible factors for trajectory of the recent Ebola outbreak in West Africa. A section of scientists have made the argument that the destruction of forest and natural habitat is directly responsible for bringing in bats into greater contact with humans. Bats are believed to have been the source of spread of the deadly Ebola virus in humans. For example, if Ebola virus was introduced into Guinea from afar, scientists have noted that one of the most reasonable transmission theories is that it was likely introduced by a traveler was a bat (Bausch & Schwarz, 2014). Furthermore, deforestation would subsequently increase the likelihood that bats would come in contact with human populations.
The spread of Ebola virus appears to be related to...
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