Converging and emerging threats to health security

Advances in biological sciences have outpaced regulatory and legal frameworks for biosecurity. Simultaneously, there has been a convergence of scientific disciplines such as synthetic biology, data science, advanced computing and many other technologies, which all have applications in health. For ex...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Environment systems & decisions Vol. 38; no. 2; pp. 198 - 207
Main Authors: Raina MacIntyre, C., Engells, Thomas Edward, Scotch, Matthew, Heslop, David James, Gumel, Abba B., Poste, George, Chen, Xin, Herche, Wesley, Steinhöfel, Kathleen, Lim, Samsung, Broom, Alex
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: New York Springer US 2018
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Summary:Advances in biological sciences have outpaced regulatory and legal frameworks for biosecurity. Simultaneously, there has been a convergence of scientific disciplines such as synthetic biology, data science, advanced computing and many other technologies, which all have applications in health. For example, advances in cybercrime methods have created ransomware attacks on hospitals, which can cripple health systems and threaten human life. New kinds of biological weapons which fall outside of traditional Cold War era thinking can be created synthetically using genetic code. These convergent trajectories are dramatically expanding the repertoire of methods which can be used for benefit or harm. We describe a new risk landscape for which there are few precedents, and where regulation and mitigation are a challenge. Rapidly evolving patterns of technology convergence and proliferation of dual-use risks expose inadequate societal preparedness. We outline examples in the areas of biological weapons, antimicrobial resistance, laboratory security and cybersecurity in health care. New challenges in health security such as precision harm in medicine can no longer be addressed within the isolated vertical silo of health, but require cross-disciplinary solutions from other fields. Nor can they cannot be managed effectively by individual countries. We outline the case for new cross-disciplinary approaches in risk analysis to an altered risk landscape.
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ISSN:2194-5403
2194-5411
DOI:10.1007/s10669-017-9667-0