id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt cord-317062-nn0u82dp Jenkins, Aaron Nested ecology and emergence in pandemics 2020-08-12 .txt text/plain 738 41 36 The global extent of COVID-19 and our ability to respond to and prevent future pandemics will benefit from a complex systems perspective. Vulnerable populations and places-eg, with elevated levels of poverty, high prevalence of non-communicable diseases, or degraded natural systems-are at high risk of having poor health outcomes and being epicentres for the emergence of pathogens with pandemic potential. A myriad of human and ecosystem health co-benefits could be realised by approaching pandemic preparedness and public health using nested systems approaches that recognise how subsystems ranging from genes, to individual behaviours, and the environment (inclusive of health care and surveillance systems) work together to regulate health. The COVID-19 pandemic might change policy on preparedness for future zoonotic infectious disease outbreaks-eg, enforcing constraints on the wildlife trade, being more circumspect about the interactions between domestic animals and wildlife, and regulating wildlife markets more carefully. COVID-19: another infectious disease emerging at the animal-human interface ./cache/cord-317062-nn0u82dp.txt ./txt/cord-317062-nn0u82dp.txt