Revue scientifique et technique
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Rev. - Off. Int. Epizoot. · Sep 2019
The importance of fisheries and aquaculture production for nutrition and food security.
Aquatic food has a significant role to play in global nutrition and food security but is often ignored in that debate. Understanding its potential role is made difficult by the fact that aquatic food covers a large number of species which come from both capture fisheries and aquaculture and the marine and freshwater environments, including finfish, crustacea, molluscs, echinoderms, aquatic plants and other aquatic animals. Further complications arise from the fact that both supply and consumption vary significantly between countries. ⋯ Challenges to such growth include the supply of raw ingredients for aquafeeds, losses due to disease outbreaks, being able to ensure high standards of food safety and overcoming environmental limitations to expansion. There are also problems with welfare conditions for people working in the supply chain which need to be addressed. Given the challenges to nutrition and food security which the world is currently facing, it is essential that aquatic food is brought into the debate and the significant benefits that aquatic foods provide are acknowledged and exploited.
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Rev. - Off. Int. Epizoot. · Aug 2018
Global rabies control: the role of international organisations and the Global Strategic Plan to eliminate dog-mediated human rabies.
International partners are united to reach the shared goal of zero dog-mediated human rabies deaths by 2030, worldwide. Under the Tripartite collaboration, the World Health Organization, the World Organisation for Animal Health and the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations are prioritising rabies as a model for 'One Health' in action. ⋯ Together with their partners, the Tripartite are working to operationalise the Framework through: i) engaging communities to build rabies awareness; ii) strengthening human and animal health systems, surveillance, and providing proof of concept that rabies elimination is feasible; iii) promoting intersectoral and regional collaboration; iv) advocating for political engagement and support; and v) building the case for investment through public-private partnerships and a Global Strategic Plan to end human deaths from dog-mediated rabies. By creating an enabling environment for countries to prioritise rabies and implement existing tools, the Tripartite are committed to catalysing change, empowering nations and providing the necessary support to consign rabies to the history books.
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In the rapidly evolving world of social media, social networks, mobile applications and citizen science, online communities can develop organically and separately from larger or more established organisations. The One Health online community is experiencing expansion from both the bottom up and the top down. In this paper, the authors review social media's strengths and weaknesses, earlier work examining Internet resources for One Health, the current state of One Health in social media (e.g. ⋯ Finally, One Health-related research projects using volunteers (citizen science) often use social media to enhance their recruitment. Including these researchers in a community of practitioners would take full advantage of their existing social media presence. In conclusion, the interactive nature of social media, combined with increasing global Internet access, provides the One Health community with opportunities to meaningfully expand their community and promote their message.
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The authors discuss 'One Health' approaches for controlling newly recognised and re-emerging diseases of animal origin and contributions towards pandemic preparedness based on enhanced collaboration between Veterinary Services, Human Health Services and Environmental Services. Improved veterinary governance and cooperation with public health managers, social scientists, ecologists and many other stakeholders are important for reducing the risks of potential zoonoses--including foodborne diseases--at their source. ⋯ Environmental determinants for disease emergence, anthropogenic climate change and human encroachment on shrinking wildlife habitats are considered, using highly pathogenic avian influenza A (H5N1) and Nipah virus as examples. Finally, the authors discuss the effects of livestock production on environmental change--in the light of global population growth and increasing demand for livestock and aquaculture products--with the need for future policy decisions to be based on a multidisciplinary One Health approach.
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Rev. - Off. Int. Epizoot. · Apr 2012
ReviewPrudent use guidelines: a review of existing veterinary guidelines.
The World Organisation for Animal Health (OIE) TerrestrialAnimal Health Code considers the prudent use of antimicrobial agents in veterinary medicine to comprise a series of practical measures and recommendations which confer benefits to animal and public health while preserving and maintaining the therapeutic efficacy of antimicrobials. This paper reviews some of the main veterinary prudent use guidelines which have been published in English and the responsibilities of those involved at all levels in the administration of antimicrobials to animals, including national regulatory authorities. The OIE guidelines are considered comprehensive and cover all of those levels, from regulatory authorities to veterinarians and food producers. Guidelines produced by national authorities, professional veterinary associations or farming associations and which are targeted at particular individuals, for example veterinarians or food animal producers, will, obviously, restrict their coverage to those aspects considered relevant for their target audience.