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The Global Animal Health Initiative:

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While history may never repeat itself, man always does - Voltaire Author: rfd8 Last modified by: gm Created Date: 8/9/2005 3:11:40 PM Document presentation format: – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Global Animal Health Initiative:


1
  • The Global Animal Health Initiative
  • The Way Forward
  • Veterinary and Public Health Collaboration

October 10, 2007 The World Bank Washington
D.C. Lonnie King, DVM, MS, MPA Director National
Center for Zoonotic, Vector-Borne, and Enteric
Diseases Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention, Atlanta, GA
2
Historical Epidemiologic Transitions 1st
Transition
  • 10,000 years ago
  • New social order due to agriculture
  • Zoonoses through animal domestication
  • Increases in infectious diseases
  • Epidemics in non-immune populations

3
Historical Epidemiologic Transitions 2nd
Transition
  • Coincided with mid-19th century Industrial
    Revolution
  • Decreases in infectiousdisease mortality
  • Increasing life expectancy
  • Improved nutrition
  • Antibiotics
  • Diseases of Civilization cancer, diabetes,
    cardiovascular diseases
  • Environmental problems
  • Chronic diseases

4
Historical Epidemiologic Transitions 3rd
Transition
  • Last 25 years
  • Emerging infectious diseasesglobally
  • New diseases and increases in mortality first
    since 19th century
  • Re-emergence
  • Antimicrobial resistance
  • 75 percent of diseases are zoonotic
  • Anthropogenic factors of emergence the
    microbial perfect storm

5
Factors in Emergence
  • Microbial adaptation and change
  • Host susceptibility to infection
  • Climate and weather
  • Changing ecosystems
  • Economic development and
  • land use
  • Human demographics and
  • behavior
  • Technology and industry

6
Factors in Emergencecontinued
  • International travel and commerce
  • Breakdown of public health
  • measures
  • Poverty and social inequality
  • War and famine
  • Lack of political will
  • Intent to harm

7
Convergence Model
Genetic and Biological Factors
Physical and Environmental Factors
Animals
E I D
Humans
Wildlife
Social, Political, and Economic Factors
Ecological Factors
8
Convergence of Human and Animal Health Drivers
  • Ecological risk and climate
  • change
  • Population dynamics
  • Growing governance gap
  • Global foodscapes
  • Microbial swarms
  • Technology and social actions and involvement

9
Emerging and Re-emerging Infectious Diseases
Examples of Emerging/Re-emerging Infectious
Diseases
10
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11
Multihost Pathogens
  • 60 of all human pathogens are zoonotic
  • 80 of animal pathogens
  • Ecological generalists

12
CDCs Most Significant Global Epidemics Over the
Last 15 Years
13
Trends in Global Population
14
Rapidly Increasing Urbanization
  • 2000
  • 47 world population living in urban areas
  • 2030
  • 60 world population living in urban areas

15
Concentrated Animal Feeding Operations (CAFOs)
Their Impact on Food Safety and Healthy
Environments
16
Livestock 2020 The Next Food Revolution
  • Global increase and demand for protein and food
    of animal origin
  • Shift from poverty of 1-2 billion people to
    middle class
  • Westernization of Asia and Latin America
  • Concerns with sustainability
  • Increases in emerging zoonoses through the
  • concentration of people and animals

17
  • Last year, over 21 billion food animals were
    produced to help feed a population of over 6
    billion people resulting in trillions of pounds
    of products distributed worldwide. Projections
    toward 2020 indicate that the demand for animal
    protein will increase by 50, especially in
    developing countries.

18
Microbial View
19
Importance of Agricultural Trade
  • Already 40 of all trade in agriculture,
    fisheries and forestry occurs between developing
    and developed countries. More than 20 of all US
    imports are food products (more than 8 million
    shipments a year).

20
Human population density
Poultry population density
Source FAO, WHO, Rimsa, Mexico City April 2005
21
Figure 1.2. Human and livestock densities, and
main feed production areas as affected by the
distance to Bangkok
Source Gerber and others 2005.
22
Safe Food begins with healthy animals
23
Ecosystem
24
Waterborne Zoonoses
Humans
Animals
Waterborne Disease
Microbial Pathogens
Water Environment
25
Worlds Most Dangerous Animals
26
West Nile Virus in the Western Hemisphere
27
WNV Neuroinvasive Disease Incidence, by County,
US, 2000
N19
28
WNV Neuroinvasive Disease Incidence, by County,
US, 2001
N64
29
WNV Neuroinvasive Disease Incidence, by County,
US, 2002
N2946
30
WNV Neuroinvasive Disease Incidence, by County,
US, 2003
N2866
31
WNV Neuroinvasive Disease Incidence, by County,
US, 2004
N1142
32
WNV Neuroinvasive Disease Incidence, by County,
US, 2005
N1294
33
WNV Neuroinvasive Disease Incidence, by County,
US, 2006
N1339
Reported as of November 7, 2006
34
The Perfect Microbial StormRavenna, Italy
  • A Virus from Africa (an alphavirus Chikungunya)
  • A mosquito from Asia (Aedes albopictus tiger
    mosquito)
  • A tourist from India (1.25 million human cases in
    2006)
  • A report of 270 people infected with Chikungunya
    in Ravenna, Italy
  • Globalization is key to the future of infectious
    diseases
  • E.g. global tire trade 2.1 billion airline
    passengers/yr climate change and, a shift of
    competent vectors worldwide

  • - Bloomberg Report 9/25/07

35
Ae. albopictus, the Asian Tiger Mosquito Initial
Discovery Site near Port of Houston, Texas, USA,
1985
36
Used Tires Stored at Other Locations
37
There is no where in the world from which we are
remote and no one from whom we are disconnected
PNAS, 2004
38
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39
Climate Changes Impact on Infectious Diseases
  • Vector-borne diseases
  • Water-borne diseases
  • Agriculture Production
  • Migration of Animals
  • Changing ecosystems for wildlife and animals
  • Built environment
  • Human-Animal Interface
  • Ecologies and a new research portfolio
  • Evidence-based public health impact

40
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41
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42
Nipah Virus
43
Virus Carriers
Fruit bats
44
SARS
45
Horseshoe bat
46
Lessons Learned From SARS
  • Importance of integrated surveillance prompt
    epidemiologic investigations and, lab capacity
  • Disruption of multiple economic sectors
  • Global implications of local problems
  • Need for critical linkages and partnerships

47
OIE-CDC Collaborating Center for Emerging and
Re-Emerging Zoonoses
  • First collaboration between CDC and an
    international animal health organization
  • Enhance pathogen discovery
  • Improve diagnostics
  • Cooperation in better understanding the
    convergence of human and animal health
  • Linkage of health system professionals
  • Jointly contributing to establishing a global
    applied research portfolio
  • Improve global preparation in identifying and
    responding to microbial threats
  • Enhance surveillance

48
Annual Global Trade inExotic Animals
  • 4 million birds
  • 640,000 reptiles
  • 40,000 primates
  • Illegal trade unknown estimate 4-6 billion
  • - Wildlife Conservation Society

49
  • Double, double toil and trouble Fire burn,
    and caldron bubble.

William Shakespeare
50
Compelling Vision
  • Accelerating prevention, control, elimination
    of ecology-mediated microbial threats
  • Systems approach with cross-cutting themes
  • Global organization

Ecosystem Health
Animal Health
Human Health
51
The Convergence of Human and Animal Health
  • In practice, no aspect of disease control,
    especially in poor communities, can be tackled
    effectively without simultaneous attention to
    peoples livelihoods and the frequent
    disincentives that they encounter as they are
    expected to participate in disease control
    efforts.
  • - Ministries and departments across
    government
  • - Professional groups medical, veterinary,
    and
  • environmental
  • - NGO and private sector working with
    communities and
  • governments

  • David Nabarro MD

  • UN System InfluenzaCoordinator

52
Determinants of Success to Address Threats from
the convergence/Pandemics
  • Political leadership and will
  • Effective alliances with civil society and the
    public sector
  • Capabilities and resources to scale-up effective
    systems for direction, coordination, and
    management
  • Support and integrated plans for long-term
    strategies to reduce risks from animal and human
    diseases
  • Collaborations among all stakeholders sharing
    information, surveillance findings, samples for
    detection and identification and effective
    communication
  • Full community engagement especially among those
    affected
  • Resisting specialization and separation and the
    incentives that drive this behavior

  • - Dr. David Nabarro

53
Neglected Zoonotic Diseases
  • Understanding One Health people, livestock and
    wildlife
  • Role of livestock as income 70 of rural poor
  • Communities at risk 800 million poor livestock
    keepers
  • Dual burden

54
Neglected Zoonotic Diseases
  • Another example of health disparities inverse
    relationship the lower the income the higher the
    risk
  • Need to raise the profile
  • Significant under-reporting
  • Human Health and Animal Health Continuum
  • Risk to human health is often best controlled by
    animal programs

55
Endemic and Emerging Zoonoses
  • The need to fight zoonotic diseases especially
    in the poorest populations of the world is
    incontestable from a moral perspective, a human
    rights perspective and an economic perspective,
    as well as a global goods perspective.
  • The Control of Neglected Zoonotic Diseases A
    Route to Poverty Alleviation - 2006

56
  • As the HIV disease pandemic surely should have
    taught us, in the context of infectious diseases,
    there is nowhere in the world from which we are
    remote and no one from whom we are
    disconnected. 
  • ? IOM, 1992

57
Emerging Retrovirus Zoonoses
  • 2 new retroviruses Cameroon Africa
  • Human T-lymphotropic virus (HTLV) types 3 and 4
  • Recovered from hunters of nonhuman primates
  • Role of bushmeat and butchering primates
  • STLV and HIV withsimilar origins

58
Foresight Analysis
  • EID are the New normal
  • Expect 3-4 new EID annually 8-34 by 2015
  • 87 new EID since 1980 58 viruses - 49 RNA
  • - mostly zoonotic
  • Found worldwide but proximity to animal
    populations or products is the key risk factor
  • Change in the host-pathogen ecology will be the
    most important single driver

59
Current and Projected Importance of Factors
Influencing Emergence
FACTOR 2007 2017 2027
Human demographics and behavior
Technology and industry
Economic development and land use
International travel and commerce
Microbial adaptation and change
Breakdown of public health measures
Climate change and weather
Changing ecosystems
Poverty and social inequality
War and famine
Lack of political will
Intent to harm
60
Mechanisms By Which Important Factors Will
Impact Emergence

FACTOR Human vulnerability Environmental and zoonotic exposure Person-to- person transmission Microbial evolution
Human demographics and behavior
Economic development and land use
International travel and commerce
Climate change and weather
Poverty and social inequality
Mechanism Influencing Emergence
61
Risk
62
Interdependence The Shrinking World
  • 1 billion people will soon cross international
    borders each year or 25/second
  • Tightly coupled system unprecedented
    vulnerability
  • Threats spread faster, further, and non-linear
  • Increased threats of global pandemics
  • Strategic risk analysis significant risk of
    developing countries with under funded public and
    animal health systems
  • If the forest is dry enough and dense enough

63
If a forest is dense dry enough
  • Worldwide, 25 people/second cross national
    borders
  • Increasingly densely connected network
  • Lessons from monocultures

64
Convergence Challenges
  • Impact and influence beyond health goods,
    services and economies
  • A shift from problem solving to managing dilemmas
  • A new global interdependence and connectivity
  • Factors creating the microbial storm are well
    entrenched
  • A great future for complexity simple but not
    simplistic
  • Reconciliation of great change with habitual and
    traditional thinking and ways of working
  • Adopting a One Health One Medicine mindset
    and strategy

65
Convergence Challenges (cont.)
  • The role of governments, educational
    institutions, and society
  • Animal and human health are a continuum of
    causality and events and need to be viewed as a
    continuum and integration of strategies
  • Recognizing the moral and ethical imperative
    health disparities
  • Inclusion of diverse communities, thinking, and
    tools
  • The need for new leaders and new ways of leading
  • Unprecedented events call for unprecedented
    responses A call to action Who? How? When?
    Where? Why?

66
Consensus of Recommendations
  • Improve infrastructures
  • Integrate surveillance strategies and diagnostics
  • Increase RD investments
  • Focus on prevention not just reaction and
    response e.g. avian influenza
  • Build a new infectious disease workforce
  • Consider a global perspective

67
Consensus of Recommendations
  • Improve disease reporting with appropriate
    incentives
  • Design global strategies and interventions
  • Create Zoonotic and EID centers
  • Meet the critical need for leadership and new
    skills
  • Address public understanding and appreciation
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