Emerging infectious diseases include:
- Outbreaks of new diseases that were unknown before.
- Known diseases that are now spreading quickly in new geographic areas, to new populations, or in an increasing number of cases.
- Known infectious diseases that were controlled in the past but now are spreading more quickly and are now out of control.
Examples of recent emerging diseases include:
- Avian Influenza (Bird Flu).
- Measles.
- Whooping Cough (Pertussis).
- Coronavirus infections, such as COVID-19, SARS, and MERS.
- Ebola.
- MPox (formerly known as Monkeypox).
- HIV infection.
- Lyme disease.
- Escherichia coli (E. coli) O157:H7.
- Hantavirus.
- Dengue fever.
- West Nile virus.
- Zika virus.
- Carbapenem-resistant bacteria.
- Malaria.
- Gonorrhea.
- Polio.
Reemerging diseases are those that come back after they have been on a major decline. This may happen because of environmental changes, changes in the specific viruses or bacteria, or problems in public health actions for diseases that were under control in the past. New strains of bacteria or viruses can emerge. Climate change in many areas of the world is leading to infections from other parts of the world now spreading into new areas. People's behavior can cause diseases to reemerge. For example, declining rates of recommended immunizations have caused measles, polio, and whooping cough to emerge again and cause unnecessary disease and deaths in some areas. The overuse of antibiotics has also caused some bacteria and viruses to adapt to medicines. This means they can't be killed easily. And governmental public health interventions that are cut back or end can lead to reemergence of previously controlled infectious diseases. All of these factors have led to more people being infected with diseases that were formerly controlled and treatable.
Travelers should know that some diseases under control in the U.S. may be active in other countries. Talk with your doctor before you travel. Ask if you need vaccines, medicines, or other safety steps before your trip.