Prospects for emerging infections in East and southeast Asia 10 years after severe acute respiratory syndrome. Horby, P. W., Pfeiffer, D., & Oshitani, H. Emerging infectious diseases, 19(6):853–860, June, 2013.
doi  abstract   bibtex   
It is 10 years since severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) emerged, and East and Southeast Asia retain a reputation as a hot spot of emerging infectious diseases. The region is certainly a hot spot of socioeconomic and environmental change, and although some changes (e.g., urbanization and agricultural intensification) may reduce the probability of emerging infectious diseases, the effect of any individual emergence event may be increased by the greater concentration and connectivity of livestock, persons, and products. The region is now better able to detect and respond to emerging infectious diseases than it was a decade ago, but the tools and methods to produce sufficiently refined assessments of the risks of disease emergence are still lacking. Given the continued scale and pace of change in East and Southeast Asia, it is vital that capabilities for predicting, identifying, and controlling biologic threats do not stagnate as the memory of SARS fades.
@article{horby_prospects_2013,
	title = {Prospects for emerging infections in {East} and southeast {Asia} 10 years after severe acute respiratory syndrome.},
	volume = {19},
	issn = {1080-6059 1080-6040},
	doi = {10.3201/eid1906.121783},
	abstract = {It is 10 years since severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) emerged, and East and Southeast Asia retain a reputation as a hot spot of emerging infectious diseases. The region is certainly a hot spot of socioeconomic and environmental change, and although some changes (e.g., urbanization and agricultural intensification) may reduce the probability of emerging infectious diseases, the  effect of any individual emergence event may be increased by the greater concentration and connectivity of livestock, persons, and products. The region is now better able to detect and respond to emerging infectious diseases than it was a decade ago, but the tools and methods to produce sufficiently refined assessments of the risks of disease emergence are still lacking. Given the continued scale and pace of change in East and Southeast Asia, it is vital that capabilities for predicting, identifying, and controlling biologic threats do not stagnate as the memory of SARS fades.},
	language = {eng},
	number = {6},
	journal = {Emerging infectious diseases},
	author = {Horby, Peter W. and Pfeiffer, Dirk and Oshitani, Hitoshi},
	month = jun,
	year = {2013},
	pmid = {23738977},
	pmcid = {PMC3713834},
	keywords = {Agriculture, Animals, Asia, Southeastern/epidemiology, Commerce, Communicable Diseases, Emerging/*epidemiology/history, East Asia, Ecosystem, Epidemiological Monitoring, Global Health, History, 21st Century, Humans, Livestock, SARS, Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome/*epidemiology/history, Southeast Asia, Travel, Urbanization, animal health, bacteria, emerging infections, influenza, influenza A(H5N1), respiratory infections, severe acute respiratory syndrome, viruses},
	pages = {853--860},
}

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