Zoonoses and emerging infectious diseases

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Zoonoses and emerging infectious diseasesDelia Grace

Program Leader, Food Safety and ZoonosesInternational Livestock Research Institute, Nairobi, Kenya

Science-Policy ForumSecond session of the UN Environment Assembly (UNEA 2)‐

Nairobi, Kenya, 20 May 2016

Overview• Zoonoses: the lethal gifts of livestock and wildlife

– Emerging infectious disease

– Neglected zoonoses

– Costs of disease

• Drivers of disease– Demography and increasing demands– Land use change and environmental degradation

• One Health solutions for zoonoses– Understanding disease– Surveillance and response– Addressing underlying causes

Where do we get our diseases?

• Few are Legacies– Paleolithic baseline: yaws, staph, pinworms, lice, typhoid, tb

• Most are Earned– Degenerative diseases: heart failure, stroke, diabetes, cancer– Allergies, asthma, autoimmune diseases– Sexually transmitted infections such as HSV-2, gonorrhea

• Many are Souvenirs– Around 60% of human diseases shared with animals– 75% of emerging infectious disease zoonotic

Secondary Host (livestock)

Secondary Host

(human)

Reservoir Host (wildlife)

VectorSylvatic cycle

Sustained transmission:- peri-domestic or urban cycle- sub-clinical, epidemic, pandemic

Type of pathogen: mutation, heterogeneity, host specificity

Habitat changeBiodiversityHost densityVector density

Spillover! •Increasing human population and density

•Human behaviour•Expansion of agriculture•Intensification of livestock production

Pathogen flow

Spill-over

Spill-over Spill-over

6

Costs of prevention (in-vestments in animal and human health systems)

Benefits from averted mild pandemic

Benefits from averted severe pandemic

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

Annual expected benefits of prevention of pandemic and non-pandemic outbreaks

$ bi

llion

per

yea

r

6.7 b

6.7b

Source World Bank 2012

7

Economic costs

Young girl presenting her pet chicken to culling team during a mass cull, Indramayu District January 2006. Photo by Peter Roeder.

• Unlucky 13 zoonoses sicken 2.4 billion people, kill 2.2 million people and affect more than 1 in 7 livestock each year

Greatest burden of endemic zoonoses falls on on billion poor livestock keepers

Livestock disease huge burden

9

Young AdultCattle 22% 6%

Shoat 28% 11%

Poultry 70% 30%Source: Otte & Chilonda; IAEA

Annual mortality of African livestock

Overview• Zoonoses: the lethal gifts of livestock

– Emerging infectious disease

– Neglected zoonoses

– Costs of disease

• Drivers of disease– Demography and increasing demands– Land use change and environmental degradation

• One Health solutions for zoonoses– Understanding disease– Surveillance and response– Addressing underlying causes

Exponential population growth

-12000 -10000 -8000 -6000 -4000 -2000 0 2000 40000

2000

4000

6000

8000

10000

12000

Global population (millions)

Global contexts – livestock domains

Adapted from Smith J 2011

Food and Nutrition Security

Human and Animal Health

Poverty Reduction

and Growth

Natural Resource

Management

Clim

ate

chan

ge

(tem

pera

ture

s to

rise

by 1

-3.5

°C b

y 21

00)

Land use changeUrbanization/irrigation

Biodiversity changeEnvironmental degradation

Feeding the world(2.5 billion more to feed by 2050)

13

Overview• Zoonoses: the lethal gifts of livestock

– Emerging infectious disease

– Neglected zoonoses

– Costs of disease

• Drivers of disease– Demography and increasing demands– Land use change and environmental degradation

• One Health solutions for zoonoses– Understanding disease– Surveillance and response– Addressing underlying causes

15

Human health

Societies, cultures, Economies, institutions, Policies

Agroecosystem health

AnimalHealth

Vet Pub

Health

EcoHealth

One medicine

ONE HEALTH

Wildlife health

Plant health

Potential RVF hotspots in eastern Africa

Kenya Tanzania

Timely responses to reduce impacts

• Surveillance and response in animal hosts can reduce costs by 90%

Adapted from IOM 2009

18

Agriculture Associated Diseaseshttp://aghealth.wordpress.com/

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