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In reply to the discussion: We are headed towards a catastrophe... [View all]pbmus
(12,940 posts)Right now, H5N1 avian flu is raising red flags. Its spreading among birds, dairy cows, and other mammals in the U.S., with a mortality rate in humans around 50% in past cases (though underreporting might skew that). No sustained human-to-human transmission yet, but a single mutation could change that, and testing is spotty, so were flying a bit blind. The WHOs got a list of over 30 priority pathogens, including influenza, dengue, and monkeypox, any of which could spark something big if conditions align.
On the flip side, were better equipped than we were pre-COVID. Vaccine tech, like mRNA, is a game-changerSARS-CoV-2 vaccines were rolled out in under a year. Surveillance systems, genetic sequencing, and global data sharing have improved, though gaps remain, especially in low-income countries. But heres the kicker: lessons from COVIDlike masking, contact tracing, and equitable vaccine distributionare already fading. People are back to coughing into their hands and ditching masks, and global health funding is still a patchwork mess.
Then theres the wildcard: antibiotic-resistant bacteria. Unlike viruses, these could cause a slower, nastier pandemic. Were burning through antibiotics like candy, and new ones arent coming fast enough.
So, are we doomed? Not necessarily. A pandemic isnt inevitable tomorrow, but the odds arent zerothink 2.5-3.3% chance per year for something COVID-scale. Stronger health systems, better surveillance, and less screwing with nature could keep the lid on. But if we keep rolling the dice, eventually, well crap out.
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