Zusammenfassung
Die im vergangenen Jahrhundert errungenen Erfolge bei der Reduzierung der Mortalität durch Infektionskrankheiten können nicht verdecken, dass beständig neue Infektionskrankheiten mit weltweiter Verbreitung auftreten. Diese gehen entweder auf „neue“ Erreger zurück („emerging diseases“), oder sind durch bekannte Erreger bedingt, die neue Verbreitungsgebiete erobert haben. Bei der Expansion der endemischen Zirkulation von Infektionserregern spielen anthropogene Faktoren eine entscheidende Rolle, und eine große Zahl völlig unterschiedlicher Erreger kommt für solche Geschehen in Betracht (Kaufmann 2010).
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Grund, S., Hengel, H. (2012). Neue Infektionserreger mit pandemischem Potential: Ursache – Verbreitung – Management. In: Darai, G., Handermann, M., Sonntag, HG., Zöller, L. (eds) Lexikon der Infektionskrankheiten des Menschen. Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-17158-1_9
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