Title: Presented at the
1Transboundary Diseases, Agriculture and Health
Policy Implications and Research Priorities
- Presented at the
- Global Ministerial Forum on Research for Health
- Bamako, Mali 17-19 November 2008
- Gabriel Rugalema and Giulia Muir
- Food and Agriculture Organization of the United
Nations
2What are Transboundary diseases?
- diseases of significant economic, trade and/or
food security importance for a considerable
number of countries - diseases which can easily spread between
countries and reach epidemic proportions - the environment in which these diseases are found
and the human activities which facilitate their
spread straddle common borders - their control/management, including exclusion,
requires co-operation between several countries.
3Some examples of Transboundary diseases of
agricultural importance
4The Burden of Disease a global snapshot
5HIV and AIDS
- Number of people living with HIV 33 million
people 3036 million - New infections in 2007 2.7 million
- Deaths due to AIDS in 2007 2 million
- Source UNAIDS 2008 Report on the Global AIDS
epidemic
6Malaria
- Percentage of the worlds population at risk
40 - Cases of Clinical Malaria each year 300
million - Malaria cases resulting in death each year 1
million (some studies indicate - as many as 3 million)
- Source http//www.theglobalfund.org/en/files/ab
out/replenishment/disease_report_malaria_en.pdf
7Tuberculosis
- People carrying the bacterium that causes
Tuberculosis globally 2 billion - Deaths due to Tuberculosis each year 1.6
million - Estimated number of people who will become sick
from TB between 2000 and 2020 200 million
Source http//tballiance.org/why/tb-threat.php
8H5N1 Avian Influenza
9Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS)
10Cholera
11Peste des Petits Ruminants (PPR)
FAO, 2008
12Factors making diseases transboundary What we
know
- 1. Ecological and Environmental changes
- 2. Human mobility and migration
- 3. Internal and International Trade
- 4. Unregulated movement of animals and plants
- 5. Interaction between humans and animals
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13Consequences of Transboundary Diseases
- Direct health impact (illness, death, disability)
- Costs related of prevention, treatment and care
- Economic loss at household and national level
- Disruption of trade and employment
- Barriers to entry into international commodity
markets - International trade and traffic may spread
transboundary diseases - Potential for exacerbation of political tensions
between countries
14Macro-economic costs of diseases
- According to recent macro-economic estimates, the
growth rate per capita GDP in highly Malarious
countries (0.25-1.3 points lower than
non-endemic countries) can amount to almost half
of the per capita GDP of poor countries over a
period of 25 years. (Malaeny and Sachs, 2004) - During the two months after the first outbreaks
in Nigeria (February 2006) about 440,000 birds
were destroyed. Assuming the disease follows the
same course for the remaining year, compensation
for 2.64 million birds will have to be paid in
the first year. The Nigerian government has
announced a compensation rate of US 1.95 per
culled chicken, which would result into a
compensation bill of about US 5.15 million for
one year. (Hinrichs, Sims and McLeod, 2006)
15Research Priorities, Capacity, Conduct and
Translation
- Why is further research called for?
- Extent of the problem not well known
- Dynamic environment (including climate change)
- Differentiated (social, geographical) cost of
transboundary diseases not well known nor
appreciated - Control measures not always evaluated for their
efficiency and effectiveness - Etc
16Research prioritieswhat we need to know
- Identify factors and channels facilitating the
establishment and spread of transboundary
diseases in different areas - Epidemiological studies to examine and identify
microbial types and sub-types, their prevalence
and distribution in time and space - Economic analyses of impact of diseases at micro,
meso and macro economic levels - Analysing existing disease surveillance systems,
their strengths and weaknesses - Examine international disease control efforts,
gaps and lessons learned over the years.
17Research Capacity
- Assess capacity building needs of institutions in
areas considered as hotspots for disease
outbreaks. - Assess effectiveness of disease-control
infrastructure and identify weaknesses. - Assess the role and potential for use of modern
technology in disease surveillance (mobile
phones, PDA, computers).
18Research Conduct
- Who will conduct the research? International
Organizations like the FAO Local and
international research institutions. - Collective, multi-sectoral efforts are necessary
through coordination and joint planning. - Need for a common set of research tools and
instruments. - Need for both bottom-up and top-down approaches.
19Research Translation
- Translating research into ACTION
- Need for frequent dialogue between researchers
and end users of research (policy makers, local
communities). - Research should be policy orientated.
- International collaboration in research, policy
development and implementation. - Strong coordination of activities related to
human health. - Stimulate culture of evidence-based policy
formulation.
20Future Scenarios Transboundary diseases require
Transboundary solutions
- Given factors such as climate change, increased
human mobility/travel and agricultural change, it
is likely that Transboundary diseases will
continue to pose a serious challenge. - Transboundary disease challenges respect no
internal, national or international borders they
hence require global perspectives and responses,
conceptually and geographically. - Human activities are the most potent factors
driving disease emergence our response or lack
thereof will determine their persistence.