The Profiles Database - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 16
About This Presentation
Title:

The Profiles Database

Description:

UK VETERINARY SURVEILLANCE STRATEGY The Profiles Database & Decision Support Tool for Prioritisation of Animal Health and Welfare Issues for Government Intervention – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:37
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 17
Provided by: rfs1
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: The Profiles Database


1
UK VETERINARY SURVEILLANCE STRATEGY
  • The Profiles Database Decision Support Tool for
    Prioritisation of Animal Health and Welfare
    Issues for Government Intervention
  • SZER Project Team
  • Jane Gibbens, Andrew Frost, Simon Lawton,
  • Francesca Day

2
HISTORY PROGRESS
  • 2003 Veterinary Surveillance Strategy published
  • 10 year implementation plan
  • enhance veterinary surveillance
  • ensure early detection of important changes in
    animal health (BSE, FMD inquiries)
  • Key goal ensure best allocation of finite
    resources for surveillance
  • Confirmed use of an objective, peer-reviewed
    evidence base profiles
  • 2004 Animal Health and Welfare Strategy
    published
  • Use sound science and evidence for decision
    making
  • Structured and transparent framework for
    prioritisation
  • Profiles to be part of this framework
  • 2005 present Wide consultation and exploration
    of options
  • Explored and defined evidence to be used in
    Profiles
  • Explored potential structure built a prototype
    in Excel
  • Validation of prototype (Defra Deputy Directors)

3
Profiles Database and Prioritisation Project
  • Profiles Database
  • A collection of profiles on specific animal
    diseases or welfare issues.
  • Each profile is
  • drafted by experts
  • peer reviewed
  • available to all on the web (once published)
  • and will be used to automatically provide summary
    reports and QAs as well once cleared for
    publication.

4
Profiles Database and Prioritisation Project
  • Prioritisation Project
  • A tool to use Profiles Database information to
    rank different diseases or issues for the 4
    reasons for Government intervention listed in the
    AHW Strategy
  • Protecting public health,
  • Promoting animal welfare,
  • Ensuring opportunities for international trade,
    and
  • Protecting the interests of the wider society and
    the economy

5
Prioritisation DST
  • Risk Epidemiology score - Equivalent to EU
    Epidemiology and Control Measures chapters
  • Likelihood of an unaffected holding becoming
    affected
  • Overall risk in epidemiological societal terms
  • (Potential) rate of spread
  • Extent to which the keeper or government can
    control
  • Able to be populated and run rapidly
  • Visual summary ranking of issues
  • By risk impact (policy areas)
  • Level playing field

6
Profiles Database and Prioritisation Project
  • Benefit can prioritise finite resources in the
    context of government policy and the AHW strategy

7
Example Prioritisation Score
  • Overview of why each disease is important
  • Context of AHWS reasons for intervention
  • Avoids assumptions
  • No difference in relative importance between
    RFIs as each RFI (and RE) score out of 100

8
How the DST works
  • Up to 10 criteria defined for each RFI
  • Each has a score
  • Each has a relative weight
  • Overall score sum of contribution from each
    criterion
  • Example Wider Society criterion with weight 10
  • (Detailed guidance defines each category)
  • The greater the weighting, the more likely that a
    change in that criterion will change the
    diseases relative ranking

9
Public Health Impact
  • AHWS To protect the health of the public
  • Summary score describes
  • How bad human disease is/might be 44
  • Human attributable risk or exposure extent GB
    based 38
  • Uncertainty 13
  • Costs of human disease 5

10
Animal Welfare
  • AHWS Protect promote the welfare of animals
  • Summary score describes
  • Number of individual animals affected 30
  • Welfare impact Five Freedoms Duration 53
  • Welfare impact of control measures 11
  • Extent of excess suffering (disease/controls) 6

11
Wider Society
  • AHWS Protect interests of wider economy,
    environment society
  • Summary score describes
  • Risk of unexpected government costs 29
  • Wider community social economic impact 29
  • Environmental impact 29
  • Producer economic impact 14

12
International Trade
  • AHWS Ensure sustainable opportunities for
    (commercial) trade
  • Summary score describes
  • Government effort 43
  • Legal risk 30
  • (Potential) extent of impact on sector 26

13
Risk Epidemiology
  • Overall risk in epidemiological societal terms
  • Likelihood of an unaffected holding becoming
    affected
  • (Potential) rate of spread
  • Extent to which the keeper or government can
    control

14
Demonstration
15
Demo screenshots
16
Future Developments
  • What if? scenarios
  • Introduce effective vaccine?
  • Stop all intervention?
  • Improve surveillance?
  • Cross-cutting issues
  • Resource allocation for population databases
  • Animal identification
  • Scanning surveillance
  • Use similar approach for non-infectious issues
  • Intoxications
  • Lameness in dairy cows
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com