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Keeping animals healthy can help keep people healthy too, and development on track
For centuries,
rinderpest, a highly contagious and fatal cattle plague, spread across
the world bringing social and economic devastation.
This deadly virus,
passed through bodily fluids, preyed on cattle and buffalo and caused
fever, severe diarrhea and dehydration. When it first emerged in Africa
at the end of the 19th century, it killed up to 90 percent of the
continent's cattle herd.
At the peak of its
reach, it decimated livestock from Europe to Africa, from the
Philippines to Brazil. In Nigeria alone, the losses to rinderpest
throughout the 1980s amounted to $2 billion. In the grip of this threat, a global response was mounted.
The World
Organisation for Animal Health (OIE) was founded to tackle the spread of
rinderpest back in 1924 and successfully led with its partners the
decades-long vaccination campaign that finally eradicated it in 2011,
overcoming the menace of livestock going back millennia.
According to some
experts, this victory saved 10 African countries alone an estimated $111
million each year, adding 126,000 tonnes of beef and 39,000 tonnes of
milk to global markets.
Improving animal
health and welfare, in particular for livestock, remains at the core of
OIE's work. We must stay vigilant against animal diseases like
rinderpest, which cause such misery and deprivation in the world.
This week we
celebrate six years of a rinderpest-free world in which livestock and
livestock keepers face one less threat. And with our new global
communication campaign, we continue to educate national key animal
health players on how to ensure "rinderpest stays history" by
recognising its symptoms and safely eliminating the remaining stocks of
the virus that exist in research laboratories.
Our Terrestrial
Animal Health Code contains guidance on the prevention and control of
rinderpest, amongst more that 100 other diseases, in the event that
there is a reoccurrence of this plague.
But keeping the world safe from rinderpest is just the start.
Animal health is intrinsically linked to human health and development, and we continue to see evidence of that today.
Some 30 million
animals are affected by Peste des Petits Ruminants (PPR), sometimes
called "sheep and goat plague", every year, costing an estimated $1.2 to
$1.7 billion dollars annually. Like rinderpest, this viral disease is
highly contagious, causing painful lesions, severe pneumonia and often,
death.
Such losses can be
devastating setbacks for the 330 million people who keep small
livestock, including sheep and goats, across Africa, the Middle East and
Asia. It represents a loss of assets, a loss of income, a lost meal and
worse.
Thanks to our
experience with the global rinderpest eradication strategy, including a
mass vaccination campaign, we are now also on the road to eradicating
PPR. We have learned lessons from previous work, including the
importance of developing a vaccine that can remain potent in
sub-tropical and tropical temperatures, to produce a similar inoculation
and delivery campaign for PPR.
We are working
alongside the UN's Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) to prioritise
the disease for eradication. As of last year, more than 50 countries
were recognised as PPR-free, and our goal is to eliminate the disease
entirely by 2030, removing yet another threat to the most vulnerable
animals and people.
While these may be
animal diseases, they have human consequences. This is why we must
redouble our efforts to eradicate PPR as well as other preventable
diseases such as foot-and-mouth disease, and rabies.
This will require
each remaining susceptible country to follow four stages, from assessing
the scale and threat of PPR, to controlling it using the vaccine until
it reaches eradication, followed by post-eradication vigilance. We know
that vaccination is a key tool in both controlling and then eradicating
disease.
Working for animal
health goes hand in hand with benefiting people. We have a track record
in coordinating mass vaccination programs that save lives and
livelihoods. And we know that working together with veterinary services
and animal medicine providers is our best chance of guaranteeing healthy
livestock for a healthy future.
Monique Eloit is director general of the World Organisation for Animal Health (OIE).
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