Title: Bush Meat
1Bush Meat Zoonotic Disease
- Proactive Solutions for a Dynamic Environment
College of African Wildlife Management Mweka,
Tanzania July 2008
2Overview
- Bush Meat and Zoonotic Disease
- The Link
- Global Viral Forecasting Initiative
- Solutions
- Disease Prevention Response
- Monitoring Surveillance
- Diagnosis
- Response
3Bush Meat and Zoonotic Disease
- The problem from a public health perspective
- Wildlife populations frequently harbor, often
silently, zoonotic disease pathogens - Bush meat hunting places people in intimate
contact with wildlife blood/tissues and increases
risks of disease transmission
4Livestock and Zoonotic Disease
- Livestock may serve as intermediaries of zoonotic
disease transmission between wildlife and humans - Cases of Avian Influenza and Nipah virus
- Livestock holders at-risk for zoonoses
5Bush Meat and Zoonotic Disease
- Zoonoses that have jumped from wildlife
reservoirs to humans through bush meat
hunting/consumption in Africa
- HIV
- Ebola Virus
- Marburg Virus
- Monkeypox Virus
- Simian Foamy Virus
6Wolfe, ND. Et al. Emerging Infectious Diseases.
Vol. 11. No. 12. December 2005 1822 - 27.
7Bush Meat Consumption
- In Cameroon
- new timber concessions
- new roads to access the resources
- increased demand for animal protein
- Across income classes in Cameroon, 9 of meat
budget is spent on bush meat (International
Institute of Tropical Agriculture) - Western Serengeti, Tanzania
- Bush meat comprised 55-95 of meat protein
requirements (Barnett, R. TRAFFIC East/Southern
Africa. 2000)
Increased Bush Meat Consumption
8Bush Meat Consumption
- Congo Basin
- Bush meat consumption estimated at gt282
g/person/day annual extraction gt 4.5 million
tons - (Fa JE, et. al. Conservation Biology 200216
232-7) - Central Africa Overall
- Estimate 579 million animals off-take as bush
meat - (Fa JE, et. al. In Conservation of Exploited
Species. Cambridge University Press. 2003
203-241)
9Bush Meat The Broader Context
- Biodiversity
- Conservation Efforts
- Economy
- Global Public Health
10Bush Meat and Zoonotic Disease Transmission
- Risk Factors
- Pathogen Prevalence
- Human and Wildlife Interaction via hunting,
slaughtering and butchering - Environmental Change that facilitates
human/wildlife interaction - Human Behavior
A.Asamoah/GWS
11Bush Meat and Zoonotic Disease Transmission
- Pathogen Prevalence
- Pool of available, circulating pathogens
- Propensity for pathogen sustainability within
wildlife populations (animal to animal) - Pathogen affinity for human host
- RNA viruses
- High mutation and recombination rates
12Bush Meat and Zoonotic Disease Transmission
- Human and Wildlife Interaction
- Highest risks associated with hunting nonhuman
primates, particularly chimpanzees - Risks increase associated with level of contact
- Opening the Carcass (Butchering/Dressing)
- Preparing and Cooking Meats
- Transport
- Sale
UWSC
13Bush Meat and Zoonotic Disease Transmission
- Human and Animal Population Dynamic Shifts
- Environmental Change
- Climate change
- Natural resource extraction
- Agricultural encroachment
- Loss of habitat
14Bush Meat and Zoonotic Disease Transmission
- Human Behavior
- Human Migration
- Population Growth
- Protein Poor Diets
- Social and Cultural Practices (traditional
medicines) - Wildlife/Exotic Animal Trade
A.Asamoah/GWS
15Bush Meat and Zoonotic Disease Transmission
- Global Viral Forecasting Initiative
- Pilot project of Dr. Nathan Wolfe (UCLA/UCSF)
- Goal forecast potential viral outbreaks before
they reach epidemic status (e.g. HIV) - Working collaboratively with hunters to identify
previously unknown viruses - Animal blood samples (hunter-collected) screened
for unknown viral gene sequences - Create data bank of animal viruses
16Global Viral Forecasting Initiative
- Screening at-risk populations (hunters, market
vendors) for viral antibodies as sentinel of
virus exposure - Simian Foamy Virus found in Cameroonian hunters
however no human-human transmission to date - Matching idiopathic human illness with possible
viral etiologies
17Global Viral Forecasting Initiative
- Viral Chatter
- Continual low-level interchange of genetic
information amongst viral subtypes - Recombined viruses may acquire novel properties
(human-human transmission) that make them
particularly dangerous - Monitoring viral chatter and early
identification of outbreak potential
18Global Viral Forecasting Initiative
- Overarching themes
- Where is the next infectious disease pandemic
likely to originate? - What does the data tell us about global hot
spots of emerging infectious disease where
should we concentrate our resources? - How might we expect it to behave?
- Can we mobilize resources in advance to be
proactive rather than reactive in our response? - Link viral characteristics (e.g. surface
proteins) with pandemic potential - Establish disease surveillance systems focused at
these hot spots that target the human/animal
interface
19Bush Meat and Disease Transmission
- How can we limit opportunities for infectious
disease transmission at the human/wildlife
interface?
- Decrease host density (people and livestock)
available to the pool of circulating pathogens - Equip and protect populations at highest risk of
exposure to pathogens
20Bush Meat and Disease Transmission
- Decreasing host density available to pathogens
- Low impact natural resource extraction (e.g.
logging) that seeks to limit human/wildlife
interaction - Limiting new road construction into wildlife
habitat - Roads increase range of existing hunting areas
and open new areas to hunting - Promote sustainable agricultural practices that
meet nutritional demands and improve livelihoods - High yield crops
- Irrigated agriculture where appropriate
- Discourage clearing of new lands, particularly
fringe areas and park boundaries
ZSL
21Bush Meat and Disease Transmission
- Equip and protect populations at risk of
exposure - Education
- Training
- Awareness Campaigns
- Personal Protective Equipment
- Target At-Risk Populations
- Hunters
- Market Vendors/ Middlemen
- Park Rangers Wildlife Officials
- Timber Workers
- Veterinarians/Animal Health Workers
22Bush Meat and Disease Transmission
- Keys to success
- Education
- Including schoolchildren
- Training/Outreach/Awareness
- Enforcement
- Adequate Nutrition
- Alternative Livelihoods
A.Asamoah/GWS
23- Best Policy Avoid Contact with Wildlife
N.Wolfe
N.Wolfe
24Bush Meat and DiseaseEducation and Awareness
- Messages must be carefully crafted and focused
- Reality of health risks as means of deterring
bush meat hunting - Consideration of costs associated with bush meat
hunting - Medical and transportation costs to treat illness
- loss of income/productivity due to illness or
death - cultural ostracism
- fines/legal action
- Active hunting will not control disease prevalence
25Bush Meat and Disease Education and Awareness
- Provide information that will limit disease
transmission opportunities
- Hunters should
- Avoid visibly sick animals
- Use personal protective equipment (gloves, masks,
etc) - Avoid high risk butchering practices
- Seek medical help immediately upon signs of
illness
UWSC
26Bush Meat and Disease Education and Awareness
- Locations for Outreach
- Bush Meat Markets
- Urban Markets
- Livestock Markets
- Stops Along Trade and Transport Routes
- Schools
- Government Offices
- Veterinarians
- Hospitals
- Campaigns Must
- Have Good Penetration to Target Audience
- Be Easily Understood
- Be Able to Respond to Community Needs
- Be Culturally Sensitive
- Flexible and Adaptable Based Upon Feedback
27Bush Meat and Refugee Camps
- Camps may be in environmentally sensitive areas,
predisposing to bush meat hunting (Kagera
Kigoma camps, Tanzania) - Bush meat viewed as
- Source of cheap, often preferred, protein
- Source of income for populations stressed
limited by displacement
- Refugee camp populations at higher risk
- Inadequate nutrition/Protein poor diets
- Higher rates of illness and poverty
- High host density rapid pathogen transmission
28Bush Meat and Refugee Camps
- Solutions
- Improving placement of refugee camps
- Future camps should avoid wildlife migration
routes - Ensuring nutritional/protein requirements of
populations are met - Subsidized livestock based meats and eggs
- Better wildlife management practices in bordering
parks and game reserves - Providing livelihood solutions
- Agricultural trainings and inputs
- Increased emphasis on self-reliance
29Addressing Disease Emergence
- Prevention and Response Solutions
- Monitoring Surveillance
- Diagnosis
- Response
30Disease Monitoring Surveillance
- Surveillance
- The collection, analysis and interpretation of
data to confirm disease presence, identify
trends, and guide actions to control disease - Community Based Disease Surveillance
- Utilizes trained community members to detect and
report cases using standard diagnostic criteria
31Community-Based Disease Surveillance
- Allows surveillance under conditions of poor
infrastructure, large coverage areas, and
inadequate veterinary resources - Contributes to disease database compilation
- Provides feedback to local community on disease
trends, risks, outbreak prevention strategies - May be extended to include vaccination/treatment
delivery by local community members
32Community-Based Disease Surveillance
- Strengths
- Improves diagnostic sensitivity
- Allows real-time ongoing monitoring with minimal
resources at minimal cost - Fosters community education and awareness
- Weaknesses
- High error rate requires clearly defined case
definitions - First stage in outbreak detection laboratory or
health worker confirmation needed - Requires good communication/chain-of-command
33CAHWs Community-Based Disease Surveillance
- Community-Based Animal Health Workers (CAHWs)
- Community members trained in the prevention and
treatment of common livestock illness and able to
deliver services at the local level
Practical Action
34CAHWs Community-Based Disease Surveillance
- CAHWs may assist with community-based disease
surveillance by - Filling out regular disease monitoring forms
- Reporting suspicious/suspect cases to veterinary
authorities - Identifying disease outbreaks at earliest stages
- Engaging in preventative activities (i.e.
vaccination)
35Allport, R. Et. Al. Rev. sci. tech. Offic. Int.
Epiz 2005. 24. (3) 921-932
36CAHWs
- CAHWs generally bring an existing level of
indigenous animal health and husbandry knowledge - Added benefits beyond disease surveillance
- Improved Livestock
- Health
Higher Meat/Milk Yields Improved Food
Security Economic Self-Sufficiency Improved
Nutrition Human Health Decreased pressure on
wildlife/bush meat
37Diagnostic Capacity
- Equipment
- Infrastructure (i.e. generators, access to wells)
- Basic Laboratory Diagnostic Equipment
(microscopes, slides, incubators, reagents) - Diagnostic Assay Kits
- Personal Protective Equipment/Biosafety Equip.
- Training
- Principles of Epidemiology
- Equipment and Assay Use
38Building Laboratory Diagnostic Capacity
39 and Outbreak Response
- Epidemiology and data analysis training
- Rapid deployment to address disease outbreak
incidents
40Additional Resources
- World Organization for Animal Health (OIE)
www.oie.int - One World, One Health www.oneworldonehealth.org
- Bush Meat Crisis Task Force www.bushmeat.org