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Epidemic disease risks and implications for Veterinary Services

Jost, CC; Machalaba, C; Karesh, WB; McDermott, JJ; Beltran-Alcrudo, D; Bett, B; Tago, D; Wongsathapornchai, K; Plee, L; Dhingra, MS; Pfeiffer, DU

Authors

CC Jost

C Machalaba

WB Karesh

JJ McDermott

D Beltran-Alcrudo

B Bett

D Tago

K Wongsathapornchai

L Plee

MS Dhingra

DU Pfeiffer



Abstract

Growth in the livestock sector is associated with heightened risk for epidemic diseases. The increasing spillover of new diseases from wildlife is being driven by wide-scale anthropogenic changes allowing for more frequent and closer wildlife-human and wildlife-livestock contacts. An increasing number of epidemics in livestock are associated with rapid transition of livestock systems from extensive to intensive, and local to global movement of livestock and their products through value chain networks with weak biosecurity. Major livestock epidemics in the past two decades have had substantial economic impacts, and the COVID-19 pandemic highlights the devastating socio-economic consequences that spillovers can have when not identified and controlled early in the process of emergence. This highlights the importance of Veterinary Services to integrated, whole-of-society efforts to control infectious diseases in animals. Emphasis within Veterinary Services must be placed on prevention and preparedness. The authors suggest four areas for continued improvement in Veterinary Services to meet this challenge. These are a) continued development of staff capacity for risk assessment and value chain analysis, together with improved policies and communication, b) appropriate adaptation of approaches to prevention and control in resource-poor settings, c) improved multi-sectoral and transboundary cooperation, which enables the sharing of resources and expertise, and d) systematic approaches that enable Veterinary Services to influence decision-making for trade, markets, business, public health, and livelihood development at the national and regional levels.

Citation

Jost, C., Machalaba, C., Karesh, W., McDermott, J., Beltran-Alcrudo, D., Bett, B., …Pfeiffer, D. (2021). Epidemic disease risks and implications for Veterinary Services. Scientific & Technical Review, 40(2), 497-509. https://doi.org/10.20506/rst.40.2.3240

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Jan 25, 2021
Publication Date 2021
Deposit Date Jan 11, 2022
Publicly Available Date Jan 11, 2022
Publisher Oikos Editorial Office
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 40
Issue 2
Pages 497-509
DOI https://doi.org/10.20506/rst.40.2.3240
Keywords Emerging infectious disease; Epidemic; One Health; Risk-based approach; Systems approach; Transboundary cooperation; Veterinary Services; INFECTIOUS-DISEASES; GLOBAL TRENDS; LIVESTOCK; SURVEILLANCE; PREVENTION; RINDERPEST; OUTBREAK; HEALTH
Public URL https://rvc-repository.worktribe.com/output/1554930

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