Discover the Dangers of Zoonoses: Diseases Transmitted from Animals to Humans

Discover the Dangers of Zoonoses: 

Diseases Transmitted from Animals to Humans

Zoonoses are diseases that are transmitted from animals to humans. The symptoms of these diseases are not clear and often involve a mixture of symptoms such as fatigue, sweating, anxiety, difficulty concentrating, joint and muscle pain, arthritis, dizziness, rapid heartbeat, high blood pressure, cardiovascular and circulatory problems, and inflammation. Modern medicine does not focus on the causes of these symptoms.

According to Andreas Schmidt, head of the social policy department of the DGB, whose area of responsibility covers health policy in NRW, inhuman working conditions, pressure on wage-earners, and fear of losing one's job are the main causes of work-related stress-induced illnesses and are responsible for the rapid increase in the above-mentioned symptoms, which the occupational health physicians and the German Trade Union Confederation describe as psychosomatic. As Andreas Schmidt reports:

"Due to stress-related symptoms, there has been an 80% increase in incapacity for work since 1995, with a total cost of 26 billion euros, as calculated by the Federal Statistical Office."

The answer of the DGB is clear: stress prevention at the workplace, anti-stress programs, development of employee performance at work, and improvement of occupational health care, especially in small and medium-sized enterprises.

However, what is not considered in today's medical and social system is that medicine in the past, with illustrious examples such as bacteriologist Hans Zinsser, did not describe these symptoms caused by stress as psychosomatic, but rather saw a disguised infectious cause behind them. The so-called Brill-Zinsser disease actually means that the symptoms described above are the late consequences of typhus.

This is called a subacute relapsing infectious disease because it occurs in waves, less dramatically than an acute bronchitis with high fever, but still continuously affecting the overall well-being of the body.

This can certainly explain the diffuse symptoms of the stressed worker of today. Many affected individuals complain of a shift in the day-night rhythm to the point of reversal.

At the same time, immunologists are already discussing whether this can be considered evidence of undetected infectious diseases.

Without these undetected infectious diseases, the human organism would be able to handle the occupational stress of our time.

However, modern medicine is not interested in this medical answer and is instead looking for psychosomatic explanations for the physical complaints reported by many people.

Instead, it does not take into account that mycoplasmas, Ehrlichia, Chlamydia, Borrelia, protozoa, helminths, Rickettsia, are the triggers of cardiovascular and circulatory diseases, various autoimmune diseases, and inflammation such as vasculitis.


Article from VBCI e.V. written by T.Taddonio.
Original article about Zoonoses.



The Hidden Causes of Work-Related Stress Symptoms.

Stress-Induced Illnesses on the Rise: The Cost of Inhuman Working Conditions.

Psychosomatic or Undetected Infectious Disease? The Controversy Behind Work-Related Symptoms.

The DGB's Answer to Work-Related Stress: Preventing and Improving Occupational Health.

The Brill-Zinsser Disease: The Late Consequences of Typhus.

Subacute Relapsing Infectious Disease: The Continuous Affect on Overall Well-being.

The Shift in Day-Night Rhythm: Evidence of Undetected Infectious Diseases?

Modern Medicine's Focus on Psychosomatic Explanations for Physical Complaints.

The Triggers Behind Cardiovascular and Circulatory Diseases: Mycoplasmas, Ehrlichia, and More.



Stay healthy and take care of yourself!