Title: Capacity building activities of the OIE
1Capacity building activitiesof the OIE
- STDF WORKSHOPon Capacity Building Tools Geneva,
31 March 2008
Dr Sarah Kahn Director, International Trade
Department
2OIE Objectives (extract)
to ensure the sanitary safety of international
trade of animals and products
to provide expertise and encourage international
solidarity in the control of animal diseases
to improve the legal framework and resources of
national Veterinary Services
3Role of Veterinary Services
- Veterinary Services are a Global Public Good
- with beneficial effects for
- Poverty Alleviation
- Securing assets (capital, animal)
- Increasing productivity
- Market Access local, regional and international
- Public Health food safety and food security
4Good Governance of VS
- Requirements for all countries
- Need for appropriate legislation and
implementation through national animal health
systems providing for - Early detection, Transparency, Notification
- Rapid response to animal disease outbreaks
- Biosecurity
- Compensation
- Vaccination when appropriate
5Good Governance of VS
- Building and maintaining efficient
epidemiosurveillance networks and territorial
meshing in the entire national territory,
potentially for all animal diseases... - a responsibility of Governments
- Concept of Quality of Services adopted by all
172 OIE Members
6OIE capacity building activities
- More than 60 Members are developing countries
- OIE Regional sub Regional offices
- provide regionally adapted services to OIE
Members - Under Central Bureau direction, implement
capacity building activities
7OIE PVS Tool
- Legal basis OIE Terrestrial Animal Health Code
- Chapter 1.3.3 Evaluation of Veterinary Services
- Chapter 1.3.4 Guidelines for the Evaluation of
Veterinary Services
8OIE PVS Tool
- Financial basis
- OIE World Animal Health and Welfare Fund
- created in May 2004
- for projects of international public utility
- control of animal diseases, especially TADs
- promotion of animal welfare and food safety.
9OIE-PVS Evaluation
- External independent evaluation not an audit
- By OIE trained / certified experts
- Established procedures
- Official request from the OIE Delegate
- Propose names of experts and dates
- Evaluation (documents and mission)
- Draft Report
- Peer review
- Country review of the draft report
- Final report confidential until country gives
approval
10PVS global programme
- The OIE plans to evaluate 105 countries over a
3-year period. - There are 50 evaluations completed or in progress
as at 10 March 2008. - 15 countries have given approval for conditional
release of their PVS report.
11OIE-PVS follow up steps
- PVS Gap analysis
- Preparation of investment programmes - in
collaboration with donors/partners - PVS follow-up missions
- Selection, training and certification of OIE PVS
Assessors (ongoing)
12OIE-PVS follow up steps
- National workshops
- Involving policy makers, senior veterinary
officials (central and provincial/district) and
private sector (producers, veterinarians etc) - Regional workshops
- To raise awareness of OIE delegates and national
focal points
13Other relevant activities
- Model Veterinary Legislation for VS
- A project is under way to develop model
legislation in French and English, as an aid to
countries wishing to develop or improve their
legislative framework - draft recommendations later this year.
14OIE Laboratory Twinning Initiative
- Objective to extend the network of OIE
capacity, expertise and standards through
Twinning - To provide better global geographical coverage
- To provide better coverage in developing and
transition countries - To provide regional support
15OIE REFERENCE LABORATORIES
Total of 171 in 2007
16Each Twinning Project..
- Is a link between an OIE Reference Laboratory or
Collaborating centre (Parent) and a national
laboratory (Candidate) - Aim is to improve expertise and diagnostic
capacity to meet OIE standards - (if possible, to be accepted as an OIE Reference
organisation)
17- OIE recommendations on the key elements of an
effective - capacity building tool
18Key elements
- Relationship of trust and mutual confidence
between the recipients and providers of
assistance - Objectives clearly defined desired capacities,
levels of performance etc - Approach closely linked with international
standards, e.g. OIE Terrestrial Code - Rationale transparent and meaningful to donors
and to countries
19Key elements
- Experts selected, trained and certified in the
use of the relevant tool, performance of experts
is monitored - Access to appropriate internationally recognised
expertise at all stages - Provide for sustainable improvement over time,
including giving countries the means to build
upon the assistance by their own efforts
20Key elements
- A consistent and predictable methodology, i.e.
countries receiving assistance know what to
expect - Design and implementation applicable to different
conditions and environments - Professional and financial accountability
- Capacities addressed in a holistic manner
- roles and responsibilities of the public and
private sectors and stakeholders.
21Key elements
- Provision for the organisation providing
assistance to refine the tool, based on feedback
from recipients - Donors, providers and recipients of assistance
collaborate to ensure objectives and expectations
are shared and satisfied - Providers and donors collaborate, share
experiences and learn from one another
22Thank you for your attention
OrganisationMondialede la SantéAnimale World
Organisation for Animal Health Organización
Mundial de Sanidad Animal