Title: Peter Hewitt
1Australias Animal Health Surveillance and
Monitoring Programs
- Peter Hewitt
- Counsellor (Agriculture Technical)
- Australian Embassy - Beijing
- February 2008
2National Animal Health Information System
- Purpose
- Collect and disseminate data from animal disease
surveillance and monitoring programs - Provide timely and accurate summary information
- To support trade and market access.
- Meet Australia's international reporting
obligations. - Objectives
- Collect data on animal health status from the
Government, states and territories and
non-government agencies. - Collate, manage, analyse and report on data
collected.
3Sources of DataThe following diagram illustrates
the sources of data targeted by the NAHIS
4Animal disease surveillance programs
- National programs managed under the Animal
Disease Surveillance Program of Animal Health
Australia - National Arbovirus Monitoring Program
- Transmissible Spongiform Encephalopathies
Freedom Assurance Program - Tuberculosis Freedom Assurance Program.
- Other national livestock disease surveillance
programs - Pig Health Monitoring Scheme
- National Sentinel Hive Program
- National Livestock Identification System.
- National wildlife disease surveillance
- Australian Wildlife Health Network.
- Disease surveillance in northern Australia
- Northern Australia Quarantine Strategy
- Northwatch.
- Initiatives for surveillance for zoonotic
diseases in humans - National Notifiable Diseases Surveillance
System
5Locations of sentinel herd and vectormonitoring
sites 200506
6National Arbovirus Monitoring Program
7Change in limits of bluetongue virus in Australia
200304 to 200506
8National Transmissible Spongiform Encephalopathy
Surveillance Program
Transmissible Spongiform Encephalopathy Freedom
Assurance Program aim is to increase market
confidence that Australian animals and animal
products are free from TSEs through management of
animal-related TSE activities. It provides
assurance to countries that import cattle and
sheep commodities that Australia remains free
from these diseases.
- The National TSE Surveillance Program
- Ruminant feed ban inspections
-
- Imported animal surveillance
- Communication and awareness
-
- Research and development.
Summary of results 2006
9Tuberculosis Freedom Assurance Program
- Eradication program completed 1997
- Australia meets the OIE standard for a TB-free
country. - Australia will continue to undertake a passive
surveillance, at least until 2010. - Central surveillance activity is meat inspection
at export abattoirs. - Other TB surveillance activities involve
- Domestic slaughter of cattle, deer, buffalo and
camels - TB testing of live export animals, and
- 3. Testing of miscellaneous granulomas submitted
after field post mortem examination for various
reasons.
10Pig Health Monitoring Scheme
- Abattoir inspections in 5 States
- Coverage estimated at 50 of Australias pig
production. - Involves post mortem examination at slaughter for
11 production-limiting disease conditions. - Purpose is to validate disease management
practices - Pigmon software
- Sponsorship by Pfizer.
11National Sentinel Hive Program
- Surveillance for exotic bee parasites and bees
around seaports. - Exotic parasites Varroa, tropilaelaps and
tracheal mites. - Exotic bee Asian honey bee (Apis cerana),
- - exists in many countries north of Australia.
- Port surveillance provides earlier detection and
supplies additional data to support health
certification for live bee exports.
Samples monitored for bee pests 2006
Samples monitored for bee pests by agent, 2006
12National Livestock Identification System
- Animal identification and trace back underpins
surveillance and monitoring systems - Central database for an animals life movements
using a national electronic animal identification
system. - Administered by Meat and Livestock Australia
(MLA) on behalf of industry and government - Covers cattle, sheep and goats. A system for
being developed
13Australian Wildlife Health Network
- Purpose
- Promote and facilitate collaborative
investigation and management of wildlife health - Support of human and animal health, biodiversity
and trade. - Facilitate a rapid alert system
- Key theme areas
- surveillance and investigation
- research
- communications and marketing
- emergency animal disease preparedness and
response - education and training.
- General surveillance for
- OIE list diseases
- bat viral diseases
- mass or unusual mortality events
- salmonella cases
- arboviral infection cases
- interesting or unusual diseases.
14Northern Australia Quarantine Strategy
- Purpose
- Conduct pre-border, border and post-border
activities to mitigate the risk of introduced
targeted exotic pests and diseases through our
northern borders - Activities
- scientific surveys
- monitoring
- public awareness activities
- collaboration with neighbouring countries
15Northwatch
- Provides surveillance and awareness activities
related to exotic pests and diseases in Cape York
Peninsula, the Torres Strait and the Gulf of
Carpentaria. - It complements other programs such as NAQS
- Provides training to government and
non-government personnel in a broad range of
subjects
16Bovine brucellosis surveillance
- Australia declared free from bovine brucellosis
(Brucella abortus) July 1989. - Targeted serological surveillance continued
until the end of 1993. - Since then, extensive general surveillance has
demonstrated ongoing freedom from bovine
brucellosis.
17Surveillance for bat viruses
- Fruit bats are reservoir hosts of several
zoonotic viruses of animal and public health
significance in Australia and Asia. - Includes Hendra and Nipah viruses, and Australian
bat lyssavirus. - Ongoing collaborative research and surveillance
studies
18Surveillance for zoonotic diseases
Provisional data for selected zoonotic diseases,
2006
19National Notifiable Diseases Surveillance System
- The Communicable Diseases Network Australia
monitors the incidence of an agreed list of human
communicable diseases through notifications to
state and territory health authorities
National Enteric Pathogen Surveillance Scheme
- The NEPSS monitors the burden of human disease
caused by enteric pathogens. - Includes both human and animal pathogens, such as
Salmonella spp., pathogenic Escherichia coli,
Yersinia spp. and Campylobacter spp.
20Japanese encephalitis surveillance
- Limited NAQS surveillance for transmission of
Japanese encephalitis in the Torres Strait and
mainland Australia. - A sentinel naïve pig herd used in Cape York
- No evidence of mainland transmission since early
2004.
21Conclusion
- The principle objective of Australias NAHIS
system is to provide accurate information,
through monitoring and surveillance, on animal
health in Australia. - Although this information can be used for a
variety of purposes, it is particularly important
in the areas of disease reporting, trade and
market access. - Every country has a different animal health
status, different priorities and unique animal
health challenges, -
- Australias animal health surveillance and
monitoring systems are world class. However they
are designed to address Australias unique
characteristics and needs. - Australia is happy to share its experiences and
expertise to assist others to build a system
applicable to their own situation and needs.