Quantifying human-animal contact rates in Malaysian Borneo: Influence of agricultural landscapes on contact with potential zoonotic disease reservoirs

Front Epidemiol. 2023 Jan 18:2:1057047. doi: 10.3389/fepid.2022.1057047. eCollection 2022.

Abstract

Changing landscapes across the globe, but particularly in Southeast Asia, are pushing humans and animals closer together and may increase the likelihood of zoonotic spillover events. Malaysian Borneo is hypothesized to be at high risk of spillover events due to proximity between reservoir species and humans caused by recent deforestation in the region. However, the relationship between landscape and human-animal contact rates has yet to be quantified. An environmentally stratified cross-sectional survey was conducted in Sabah, Malaysia in 2015, collecting geolocated questionnaire data on potential risk factors for contact with animals for 10,100 individuals. 51% of individuals reported contact with poultry, 46% with NHPs, 30% with bats, and 2% with swine. Generalised linear mixed models identified occupational and demographic factors associated with increased contact with these species, which varied when comparing wildlife to domesticated animals. Reported contact rates with each animal group were integrated with remote sensing-derived environmental data within a Bayesian framework to identify regions with high probabilities of contact with animal reservoirs. We have identified high spatial heterogeneity of contact with animals and clear associations between agricultural practices and high animal rates. This approach will help inform public health campaigns in at-risk populations and can improve pathogen surveillance efforts on Malaysian Borneo. This method can additionally serve as a framework for researchers looking to identify targets for future pathogen detection in a chosen region of study.

Keywords: climate change; human-animal interface; land use - land cover change; pathogen surveillance; reservoir species; spillover; zoonoses.

Grants and funding

We acknowledge the UK Medical Research Council, Natural Environment Research Council, Economic and Social Research Council and Biotechnology and Biosciences Research Council for funding received for this project through the Environmental and Social Ecology of Human Infectious Diseases initiative (grant number G1100796). HK is supported by the Future of Humanity Institute at the University of Oxford DPhil Scholarship program. KF is supported by a Sir Henry Dale fellowship jointly funded by the Wellcome Trust and Royal Society (grant number 221963/Z/20/Z).