World Organisation for Animal Health (OIE) Sub-Regional Representation for Southern Africa

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Dr Patrick Bastiaensen, Programme officer. World Organisation for Animal Health (OIE) Sub-Regional Representation for Southern Africa Global Veterinary Governance 1 Regional Training Seminar for OIE Focal Points for Veterinary Products November 23 rd, 2010 Johannesburg, South Africa Key factors 2 1

Trends in Global population Global Population: 1950-2015 Total Billions 8 Less developed countries More developed countries 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 1950 55 60 65 70 75 80 85 90 95 2000 05 10 15 Source: US Bureau of the Census 3 Source : Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) Atlanta Globalisation Unprecedented movement of commodities and people are used by pathogens to colonise the entire planet 4 2

Nowadays pathogens are transported around the world faster than the average incubation time of most epizootics. Climate changes and human behaviour allow colonisation of new territories by vectors and pathogens (e.g. bluetongue in Europe) 5 The growing importance of the zoonotic potential of animal pathogens 60% of human pathogens are zoonotic 75% of emerging diseases are zoonotic 80% of agents with potential bioterrorist use are zoonotic pathogens 6 3

Trends in animal protein consumption Some projections towards 2030 indicate that the demand for animal proteins, in particular milk and eggs, will increase by 50%, especially in developing countries 7 Trends in animal protein consumption Shift from poverty to middle-class (+1 billion people expected) Increase in the number of daily meals More milk, eggs and meat in meals 8 4

Which concepts to promote in order to protect countries and regions from emerging and re-emerging emerging diseases The Global Public Good concept The «One Health» concept The Good Governance of Veterinary Services 9 The Global Public Good Concept Global public goods are goods whose benefits extend to all countries, people and generations. 10 5

The Global Public Good Concept In relation to the control and eradication of infectious diseases, the benefits are international and inter-generational in scope. Countries depend on each other Animal health systems are not a commercial nor a strictly agricultural good. They are fully eligible for national and global public resources Failure of one country may endanger the entire planet 11 The concept of One Health A global strategy for preventing and managing risks at the human-animal interface 12 6

Food security (within One Health concept) Food shortages are also a public health problem, just like food safety Impact of animal diseases on animal production/losses of animal products (20% worldwide) It is probably impossible to prevent the intensification of animal production worldwide Environmental cost/benefit studies are to be completed: milk versus meat, work, fertilisation, natural pastoral resources 13 The public and private components of Veterinary Services are in the front line regarding these matters in all countries of the world 14 7

The Good Governance Requirements for all countries Need for appropriate legislation and its efficient implementation through appropriate human and financial resources allowing national animal health systems to provide for: Appropriate surveillance, early detection, transparency Rapid response to animal disease outbreaks Biosecurity measures Compensation Vaccination when appropriate Deregulation can be source of biological disasters 15 Good Governance Key elements: Building and maintaining efficient epidemiosurveillance networks and territorial meshing in the entire national territory, potentially for all of terrestrial and aquatic diseases Supervision of all Governments Alliances between public and private sectors Use of the concept and standards of «Quality of Services» democratically adopted by all the OIE Members Veterinary education and research National chain of command 16 8

Arguments to be used The control of animal diseases contributes to: Public health: zoonoses, food safety and food security, One Health concept Market Access: local, regional and international Poverty alleviation (1 billion poor livestock producers) Protection of goods (productive livestock = capital) Increasing productivity and capital security Animal welfare 17 Principles guiding the OIE in animal welfare Animal health is a key component of animal welfare Scientific basis in any standard Democratic adoption of standards Key role of Veterinary Services in applying the OIE standards 18 9

Objectives of the OIE 1. To ensure transparency in the global animal disease and zoonosis situation 2. To collect, analyse and disseminate scientific veterinary information 3. To provide expertise and encourage international solidarity in the control of animal diseases 4. Within its mandate under the WTO SPS Agreement, to safeguard world trade by publishing health standards for international trade in animals and animal products 5. To improve the legal framework and resources of national Veterinary Services 6. To provide a better guarantee of the safety of food of animal origin and to promote animal welfare through a science-based approach 19 Governance support tools used by the OIE 20 10

The OIE-PVS Tool Evaluation of the Performance of Veterinary Services a tool for the Good Governance of Veterinary Services 21 The PVS Pathway «treatment» Veterinary Services Strategic Plan OIE PVS Pathway for efficient Vt Veterinary Services Evaluation PVS «diagnosis» PVS Gap Analysis «prescription» OIE works with governments, Stakeholders and donors (if needed) Modernisation of legislation Public/private Partnerships Country / Donors Investment / Projects Veterinary Education PVS Follow-Up Evaluation mission Laboratories 22 11

Legal and financial basis of the PVS tool Terrestrial Animal Health Code Chapter 3.1: Quality of Veterinary Services (public and private components) Chapter 3.2: Guidelines for the evaluation of Veterinary Services OIE World Animal Health and Welfare Fund Development of the world fund to help finance the OIE in the application of the PVS tool and the setting up of regional capabilities. Participation of France alongside the European Commission, the World Bank, Canada, the USA, Australia, Italy, Switzerland and the United Kingdom 23 Voluntary official procedure - PVS evaluation Training and certification of OIE experts Mission under the auspices of the OIE PVS preliminary draft report by country OIE peer review PVS final report by country Acceptance by the country +/- public dissemination Gap analysis and shortcoming and investment proposals (national and international donors) 24 100 countries already involved 12

Priority diseases and regions Geographical coverage (special effort for developing countries and countries in transition) Better global disease surveillance Improvement in compliance with international standards (OIE) Access for more countries to carry out high-level diagnoses and expert valuations > high detection / rapid response Build and maintain a scientific community in beneficiary countries 25 Initial veterinary training Consideration of the priority components of Global Public Good National meshing Adaptation to market demand World Conference of Deans National report on initial training 26 13

OIE focal points National Specialist focal points: Aquatic animal diseases Wildlife Sanitary information systems Veterinary medicinal products Animal Welfare Animal production food safety 27 Dangers of deregulation Conclusions Public and private alliances Chain of commands / networks territorial meshing Incentives (training, income, medicinal products ) Initial and continuous training Applied research 28 14

Thank you for your attention Organisation Mondiale de la Santé Animale World Organisation for Animal Health Organización Mundial de Sanidad Animal 29 12 rue de Prony, 75017 Paris, France - www.oie.int oie@oie.int 15