Humans and animals interact with each other and their environment in ways that can change disease patterns and exacerbate health threats. For example, as humans develop new land, they contact displaced animals and organisms, increasing human exposure to zoonotic diseases. These zoonotic pathogens are the source of 70-75% of the emerging infectious diseases in humans.
Public health laboratories conduct testing that crosses human, animal and environmental health domains. Many of these threats can lead to serious illness or death. Examples include:
Food Safety: Public health laboratories work to detect and control foodborne illness through PulseNet and the Food Emergency Response Network. Teams from human, animal and environmental backgrounds collaborate to solve foodborne outbreaks and prevent future occurrences to ensure our food is safe to eat.
Environmental Health: Environmental health programs at public health laboratories test for chemicals and other harmful contaminants that can affect humans, animals or the environment with dire consequences. Depending on the location, such a program might test well water, cosmetics, spices, algae or farm runoff for potential contamination.
Infectious Diseases: Public health laboratories conduct testing and surveillance for diseases that originate in animals. These include avian influenza (birds and geese), hantavirus (rodents) and arboviral diseases such as West Nile virus, encephalitis and malaria (mosquitos). Testing can lead to early detection and help prevent the spread of disease.