rvallee
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
Paper: https://science.sciencemag.org/content/367/6475/250. Titled: Are noncommunicable diseases communicable? Thanks @Lisa108!
https://www.cifar.ca/cifarnews/2020/01/16/obesity-heart-disease-and-diabetes-may-be-communicable
A new paper in Science by B. Brett Finlay and a team of CIFAR fellows in the Humans & the Microbiome program proposes that “non-communicable” diseases may be transmitted between people through the microbiome.
“Non-communicable diseases” including heart disease, cancer, and lung disease are now the most common causes of death, accounting for 70 percent of deaths worldwide. These diseases are considered “non-communicable” because they are thought to be caused by a combination of genetic, lifestyle, and environmental factors and can’t be transmitted between people.
A new research paper in Science by a team of fellows in CIFAR’s Humans & the Microbiome program throws this long-held belief into question by providing evidence that many diseases may be transmissible between people through microbes (including bacteria, fungi, and viruses) that live in and on our bodies.
“If our hypothesis is proven correct, it will rewrite the entire book on public health” says B. Brett Finlay, CIFAR Fellow and professor of microbiology at the University of British Columbia, who is lead author on the paper.
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