The publication is part of the World Class Parasites series published by Springer
The latest book by Bernard Fried, Kreider Professor Emeritus  of Biology, will help public health professionals and researchers fight  diseases caused by parasites.
The publication, Food-Borne Parasitic Zoonoses: Fish and Plant-Borne Parasites,  was co-edited by K. Darwin Murrell, retired deputy administrator of the  United States Agricultural Research Service, and now research scientist  with the Danish Centre for Experimental Parasitology in Copenhagen.  Published by Springer in September, it is volume 11 of the World Class Parasites series.
The book, being the first of its kind, comprehensively examines major  helminth (worm) diseases that are transmitted to humans by fish,  shellfish, mollusks, and aquatic vegetation, such as watercress.
“When humans eat these food products in a raw or improperly cooked  state, they may become infected with a number of different types of  food-borne helminths,” explains Fried. “Many of these helminths can  produce serious diseases in humans and the number of humans infected  with these diseases in both underdeveloped and developed countries is  increasing.”
Fried says this rise in the number of infections in developed  countries is because of increasing international markets, improved  transportation systems, and demographic changes.
These diseases are an important area of concern for the Neglected  Tropical Disease Coalition of the World Health Organization because of  their growing threat to public health and debilitating societal affects.  These include their complicated links to poverty, agricultural  intensification and environmental degradation, and the lack of  appropriate tools to control them.
“I think this book will provide an incentive for a diverse group of  scientists to pursue further research on neglected tropical diseases,”  says Fried.
The book reviews not only the prevalence and distribution of these  diseases, including available health and economic impact data, but also  highlights gaps in the knowledge base that must be filled in order to  gain insight on approaches to prevention on an international scale.  Fried says the volume is ideal for parasitologists, microbiologists,  immunologists, virologists, and graduate students and professionals in  the fields of public health, infectious disease, food safety, and food  science.
Currently, Fried is performing related research on methods for  preventing trematode, or flatworm, infections in humans due to the  consumption of raw or improperly cooked snails and fish. Collaborating  with Fried on this research is biology major Robert Peoples ’08 (Bear, Del.).
“My current research examines ways to kill the [infectious] cysts in  invertebrate hosts that may be transferred to humans who consume such  tainted (infected) foods,” Fried explains. “[Peoples and I] are  examining various physical and chemical factors that kill such cysts.”
Work on this topic by Fried and Peoples is scheduled to be published in the December 2007 issue of the Journal of Parasitology.
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