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Avian Influenza October 27, 2006 Mini University

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Title: Avian Influenza October 27, 2006 Mini University


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Avian InfluenzaOctober 27, 2006Mini University
Dr. Dennis Carroll, Director USAID Avian and
Pandemic Influenza Preparedness and Response Unit
3
Presentation Overview
  • Part 1
  • Avian Influenza Update
  • Part 2
  • Poverty and Newly Emergent Diseases

4
  • If this is Y2K, all over again .
  • . If so,
  • when is January 1, 2000?

5
  • Part 1
  • What is Avian Influenza?
  • Why all the concern?
  • What is being done internationally?

6
What is Avian Influenza?
  • The H5N1 AI virus mainly affects domestic wild
    birds
  • The AI is closely related to influenza viruses
    that cause annual flu outbreaks among humans
  • AI viruses can mutate rapidly and able to evade
    human immune systems
  • H5N1 AI virus very lethal to animals and humans
  • - 55 countries affected, 38 new in 2006
  • - estimated 250 million birds killed
  • - 256 lab-confirmed human cases with 151
    deaths in 8 countries a 59 mortality rate

7
How is AI spread?
  • Animal human populations in close proximity
  • - farm animals and pets in/under/next to
    houses
  • - live animal markets (many species from
    many countries)
  • Poor agricultural practices
  • - inadequate infection control on farms
  • - poultry excrement used in agriculture
    (e.g. fed to pigs)
  • Poor food hygiene
  • - food preparation practices
  • - consumption of raw/undercooked meat
  • Frequent travel/trade involving humans and birds
  • - movement of people/animals among farms
  • - legal and illegal animal trade
  • - wild bird migration

8
Is a Pandemic Possible?
30 40 years cycle
9
and FAO
Map courtesy of FAO using data from OIE
10
Is it Deja Vu all over again? - the 1918 Pandemic
  • Three epidemic waves in close succession
  • March 1918 Sept 1918 Feb 1919
  • Estimated 50 -100 million deaths world-wide
  • In the U.S.
  • 10 million hospitalizations
  • 2 million deaths

11
Could AI cause a pandemic?
  • Requirements for pandemic flu
  • Novel virus
  • Ability to replicate in humans and cause serious
    damage
  • Ability to pass efficiently from person to person

H5N1 Yes Yes Not yet
12
Take Home Lessons
  • To-date H5N1 principally an animal based
    infection
  • Spreading of virus appears linked to a
    combination of bird migration and unregulated
    bird trade
  • Effective response needs to be cross-sectoral
    spanning animal and human health
  • Early detection and rapid response to outbreaks
    essential for containment
  • An informed public and adoption of low risk
    behaviors key
  • National leadership is critical

13
U.S. and International Response
  • WHO and FAO providing international leadership
  • International Partnership for Avian and Pandemic
    Influenza key forum for international
    coordination
  • 1.9 billion pledged by international community
    at Beijing Conference January 2006
  • U.S. pledged 334 million and is actively
    working in more than 50 countries to contain AI

14
US International AI Strategy
  • Goal to contain and mitigate the effect of an
    outbreak of pandemic influenza
  • Objectives
  • prevent and contain H5N1 outbreaks in
    animals
  • prevent animal-to-human infections
  • prepare for a human influenza pandemic

15
US International AI Strategy
  • Key principles
  • an emergency response
  • use existing platforms for efficiency
  • support WHO, FAO/OIE as the lead technical
    organizations
  • work closely across the USG
  • cross-sector approach bridging animal and human
    health
  • Tactical Pillars
  • Preparedness and Planning
  • Early Warning Surveillance Diagnosis
  • Rapid Response and Containment
  • Behavior Change Communications Advocacy
  • Stockpiling and Deployment of key commodities

16
National Strategy for Pandemic Influenza A
coordinated USG approach
17
Part 2. Poverty and Newly Emergent Diseases
The Chicken that Lays the Golden Egg
18
Presentation Overview
  • Household Economics and Avian Influenza.
  • The Role of Poverty in the Emergence and Spread
    of AI.
  • Time for a Transformational Strategy.

19
General Observations
  • In the past year more than 4,000 AI outbreaks
    have been reported to OIE
  • Of these an estimated 75 have been in backyard
    or mom and pop farms

20
General Observations
  • These small-farm holders largely fall into the
    lowest economic quintiles
  • Poultry farming make significant contributions to
    household
  • Nutrition
  • Livelihood

21
The Viet Nam Example
  • In Viet Nam
  • ½ of all households rural and urban keep
    chickens
  • In rural areas 7/10 households a total of 8
    million HHs own chickens
  • Average flock size is 16 birds (4 hens, 1 cock,
    and 11 growers and chicks)
  • Only 1 of flocks consist of more than 100 birds

Sources Pro-Poor Livestock Initiative
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  • Chickens mostly kept as backyard flocks by small
    holders with an average per capita income of less
    than 100 USD per year
  • A flock of 12 hens yield a month income of around
    18 USD through the sale of eggs and birds
  • Based on an initial investment of 2.50 USD for
    the purchase of a hen and 0.65 USD required for a
    fraction of a cock the annual return to
    capital investment is nearly 700

23
  • In addition to the high rate of return a
    further advantage of investing in poultry is the
    flexibility to partition the investment in small
    amounts of cash throughout the year, as needed.

24
  • At a national level cessation of back yard
    farming in Viet Nam would lead to a lost income
    of 550 million USD per year, or 5 of
    agricultural GDP, or 2.5 million full time jobs
    at minimum rural wage rate

25
  • Applying these findings, even partially, across
    the 4,000 outbreaks recorded over the past year
    highlights the important contribution poultry
    rearing makes to the economic and nutritional
    welfare to the poor.

26
  • Conclusion 1 for reasons of equity and economic
    efficiency it is important that the
    socio-economic impact of AI control measures be
    assessed before applied.

27
A Double Edged Sword
  • Conclusion 2 this very attractiveness has
    contributed to an explosion of poultry rearing
    to meet the nutritional and economic needs of
    ever expanding populations

28
The China Syndrome
  • In China in 1969 there were an estimated 50
    million poultry being raised to feed a population
    of 750 million.
  • By 1999 this number increased to 15 billion
  • In China, and elsewhere in the region this
    dramatic increase in poultry farming was largely
    on non-industrial farms following traditional
    animal husbandry practices

29
  • The mixture of high populations of people and
    poultry has created a cauldron of emergent
    infectious diseases where there is the increased
    probability that poultry viruses such as H5N1
    can infect humans and give rise to new pandemic
    strains.

30
Newly Identified Infectious Diseases and Pathogens
Avian Influenza Nipah Virus New variant
Creutzfelt-Jacob disease Savia virus Hendra
virus Vibrio choerae 0139 Hepatitis C HIV
SARS H5N1 (AI A virus) Kaposis sarcoma
virus Hantavirus Guanarito virus Hepatitis E
human herpesvirus 6
2004 2003 1999 1997 1996 1995 1994 1993 1992 1991
1989 1988 1983
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A. Fauci, NIAID
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  • While much of the public and political discussion
    on how best to respond to AI has been dominated
    by emergency responses which are of critical
    importance these strategies will not be
    sufficient to lower risk of a pandemic influenza
    from actually happening

33
  • Short of reversing the size of the global
    population we need to ask how the animal
    husbandry and market place practices that are
    driving the emergence of new human pathogens can
    themselves be transformed

34
  • By focusing exclusively on building a protective
    shield of vaccines, drugs and early warnings we
    will do little to limit the emergence of newer
    and deadlier pathogens

35
  • What we do risk is making influenza and other
    zoonotic diseases a scourge inflicted on those
    who cant afford or access vaccines and drugs
  • .. In short, diseases of the poor as has
    happened with malaria, tuberculosis and HIV/AIDS
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