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Home » What is zoonosis? Worrying new disease development explained – and how it could cause next pandemic
World

What is zoonosis? Worrying new disease development explained – and how it could cause next pandemic

By staff7 April 2025No Comments4 Mins Read

Officials have warned that the massive global animal trade could cause more potentially deadly diseases already circulating amongst animals to jump to humans and trigger pandemics

10:01, 07 Apr 2025Updated 10:39, 07 Apr 2025

Dogs in a cage
More diseases could spread from animals to humans, experts have warned(Image: Adam Gerrard / Daily Mirror)

A startling new case of zoonosis in the UK has brought pandemic fears roaring back into the forefront as officials mull the possibility of diseases passing between species.

The Mirror revealed this week that the first-ever case of “reverse zoonosis” was reported in a factory-farmed pig, but hidden within the depths of government surveillance documents covering a pig farm in Northern Ireland. The pig had developed a case of human flu, which typically doesn’t cross species barriers, raising significant concerns about zoonotic and reverse zoonotic disease risks, as the affected farm also reported swine flu among its pigs.

Similar human-to-pig transmissions have been documented in the United States, but this critical UK case had not been publicly highlighted until now. Experts have long warned that filthy farms and markets packed full of sick, distressed animals are potential breeding grounds for deadly new viruses that can jump from animals to humans.

READ MORE: Health experts call for ban to prevent pandemics after first-ever ‘reverse zoonosis’ case

Virus particle
The first case of “reverse zoonosis” has been reported in the UK(Image: Getty Images)

What is zoonosis?

Zoonosis is not the name of a specific disease, rather a process during which diseases cross from one species to the next. Crossings are limited to orders, like mammals, and can be major trigger points for pandemics. Coronavirus, for instance, is believed to have originated in bats before spreading to humans around 2020.

The World Health Organisation (WHO) explains there are more than 200 known types of zoonoses, and that they “comprise a large percentage of new and existing diseases in humans”. They don’t always evolve to a pandemic level, and may remain transmissible through blood or saliva but remain much more dangerous.

A member of the clinical staff wears personal protective equipment (PPE) as she cares for a patient
Scientists have warned the animal trade could cause more diseases to pass from animals to humans(Image: POOL/AFP via Getty Images)

For instance, rabies, which is 100 percent preventable and virtually 100 percent fatal, is a zoonosis that transmits through bites or fluid contact. The WHO states: “A zoonosis is an infectious disease that has jumped from a non-human animal to humans.

“Zoonotic pathogens may be bacterial, viral or parasitic, or may involve unconventional agents and can spread to humans through direct contact or through food, water or the environment. They represent a major public health problem around the world due to our close relationship with animals in agriculture, as companions and in the natural environment.”

The WHO states that human meat cultivating is also causing antimicrobial resistance, with new diseases – both in humans and otherwise – becoming more difficult to tackle with antibiotics due to their consistent use in animal rearing.

Battery hens are pictured in a chicken shed
Experts have called on officials to reconsider the way the country interacts with animals(Image: Getty Images)

The organisation adds that zoonoses cause “disruptions in the production and trade of animal products for food and other uses”, but they also make them more likely to spread between different animals and humans. Scientists have long noted that the stress of being held captive causes damage to animal immune systems, increasing the already sizeable scale of “virus shedding”.

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Shedding places both humans and animals at risk of contracting more diseases, and experts have called on the government to bring an end to fur exports in the UK and help shutter the trade for good to “prevent future outbreaks and pandemics”.

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