Decisions made by nations and businesses on how food is grown, bred, transported and sold will play a key role in preventing or causing the next pandemic. By Brian Williams, Peter Borden and Desmond Dickerson
By applying new principles and technology to food-supply-related challenges, we could minimize the scale and scope of future pandemics.
If “wet markets” in Wuhan, China, played an early role in the spread of COVID-19, as is widely believed, the coronavirus pandemic has plenty of company: SARS, MERS, Ebola and other diseases also migrated from animals to humans. It’s impossible to overstate the role of the world’s food supply in the suppression or transmission of infectious disease. By using the following food supply-related principles to inform business and regulatory decisions, in fact, we could eliminate or, more likely, minimize the scale and scope of the next pandemic:
Each of the following measures, in which we expect to see continued advancements over the next three to five years, addresses at least one of these goals.
While the progress noted here, as well as other advancements, holds great promise for mitigating the impact of the next pandemic, humankind must also bear in mind the Hippocratic Oath, after a fashion, and cease to do harm. As we continue to tackle food-supply-related challenges, we must also ask uncomfortable questions about humankind’s role in this and future pandemics — and indeed in other mega-scale healthcare crises. It’s imperative that we address how climate change, in particular, will impact the preparation and consumption of food. Infectious water-related diseases are a major cause of morbidity and mortality worldwide. Although much of this disease is caused by “classical” water-related pathogens such as typhoid and cholera, newly recognized pathogens and new strains of established pathogens are being discovered that present important additional challenges to both the water and public health sectors. Additionally, as the World Health Organization has noted, the effect of climate change on the water supply will cause significant human migration, leading to conditions that make it harder to provide sufficient access to clean water. Animal migrations will also lead to increased changes in habitat and disease transmission. In both North America and the UK, ticks have shifted northward, bringing with them diseases to which the inhabitants may lack immunity. Since 2001, the UK has seen a 1,000% increase in cases of Lyme disease. In short, changes introduced to the environment by humans, at both the macro and micro levels, continue to introduce risk factors we cannot anticipate. However, technology’s growing ability to make the food supply safer gives reason for optimism for better handling the next pandemic.
This article was written by Brian Williams, Cognizant’s Chief Digital Officer, Life Sciences, Peter Borden, Chief Digital Officer, Healthcare, and Desmond Dickerson, Manager, Center for the Future of Work. Read more about Brian, Peter and Desmond.