Planning for preparedness: EU perspectives on Avian Influenza, African Swine Fever and Lumpy Skin Disease Workshop "Emergency preparedness for trans-boundary animal diseases": the role of stakeholders 16 May 2017 Andrea Gavinelli, Head of Unit SANTE G3 "Official Controls and eradication of diseases in animals"
26
Embed
Planning for preparedness: EU perspectives on Avian ...static.reseaudesassociations.fr/cities/690/... · LSD in SE Europe: Priorities in 2017 All countries that vaccinated against
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Planning for preparedness: EU perspectives on Avian Influenza,
African Swine Fever and Lumpy Skin Disease
Workshop "Emergency preparedness for trans-boundary animal diseases":
the role of stakeholders 16 May 2017
Andrea Gavinelli, Head of Unit SANTE G3
"Official Controls and eradication of diseases in animals"
Outline
Instruments to plan EU actions and resources
in crisis preparedness:
• Animal Health Law
• Official Controls Regulation
• Financial framework: the Veterinary
programme
Challenges in 2017
African Swine F.
Av. flu
Lumpy Skin Disease
DG SANTE priorities on animal health policy
The EU animal disease management in practice:
1.An efficient network of MS CVOs and SANTE to ensure rapid exchange of information on disease outbreaks including ADNS;
2.Commission use of its powers and adopts emergency measures within few hours resulting in:
• fewer animals being killed less EU compensation being paid
• Member States not adopting unilateral measures ensuring:a) Functioning of EU single market
b) Solidarity between Member States c) Exports to 3rd Countries
DG SANTE priorities on animal health policy
The new Animal Health Law:
1. Puts emphasis on increased effort to anticipate possible outbreaks of new or exotic diseases in the EU
2. Provides even more solid foundation to ensure that the high levels of protection in the EU
3. EC to deliver on the objectives of this Law:
• simpler and clearer rules focus on key priorities: preventing and eradicating disease with prioritization by listing and categorizing diseases
• modern technologies: for surveillance and early detection, electronic identification and it is even more aligned with international standards
• more flexibility: to adjust rules to local circumstances, and to emerging issues such as climate and social change
SANTE policy addressing animal health challenges
The main challenge comes from the nature and scale of food and animal production systems entails inevitable outbreaks of disease which can escalate into crisis with important impacts on health, trade and the economy
- Old diseases: ASF (North East & South East)
- New/exotic diseases: LSD, PPR
- Emerging diseases: MERS CoV,
- Vector borne diseases: BT, WNV
- Wildlife driven disease: ASF, AI
- Aquatic new diseases: Acute hepatopancreaticnecrosis disease (of shrimps)
EU main tools for diseases control
• EU fully harmonised veterinary legislation
• Specific control Directive
• Contingency plans
• Regionalisation policy
• EU Reference Laboratory – diagnostic manual
• EU co-financing of emergency measures and eradication
programmes
• Enforcement – audits
• The Community Veterinary Emergency Team - CVET
• Better training for safer food – BTSF
• Scientific advise – EFSA scientific opinions
• International cooperation – OIE/FAO GF-TADSs
• EU research projects - RTD
By April 2018
The work over the next years: implementing AHL and OCR legislation
Animal Health
Law2016/429
Official Controls
Reg. 2017/625
drafting tertiary legislation
(delegated & implementing acts)
April 2021
14.12.2019
Set up the Reference Centre for Animal Welfare
No of empowermentslegally required and needed formarket functioning beforeapplication date (14.12.2019)
No of expected delegated &implementing acts:
No of empowerments:
A coordinated approach to implement new legislation
Animal Health Law
180
62
~16
OfficialControls
Regulation
85
37
~ 22
Veterinary programme in 2016: summary of allocation
Sampling0,41%
Testing48,42%
Slaughtering4,15%
Vaccination25,15%
Compensation18,01%
Cleaning desinfection
0,23%
Monitoring0,85%
Delivery of wild animals
0,02%
Other2,74%
Sampling 663.731,17 € 0,41%
Testing 77.680.381,65 € 48,42%
Slaughtering 6.658.530,90 € 4,15%
Vaccination 40.351.083,08 € 25,15%
Compensation 28.884.866,45 € 18,01%
Cleaning desinfection 369.478,95 € 0,23%
Monitoring 1.366.998,39 € 0,85%
Delivery of wild animals 39.864,63 € 0,02%
Other 4.402.680,08 € 2,74%
Total (in 2016) 160.417.615,29 € 100,00%
2016 Budget allocation per disease (Veterinary programmes)
African Swine Fever4,32% Avian Influenza In
Poultry And Wild Birds1,18%
Bluetongue In Endemic Or High Risk
Areas4,63%
Bovine Brucellosis6,41%
Bovine Tuberculosis
39,10%
Classical Swine Fever1,60%
Rabies16,43%
Salmonella10,77%
Sheep And Goat Brucellosis (B.
Melitensis)7,98%
Transmissible Spongiform
Encephalopathies7,57%
DISEASE amount of the Vet. Programme in 2016
African Swine Fever 6.935.966,52 €Avian Influenza In Poultry And Wild
Birds 1.879.274,04 €Bluetongue In Endemic Or High Risk
Appointment of an EU Reference Laboratory (EURL) for Diseasescaused by Capripox viruses (including LSD) CODA – CERVA, Belgium,26 January 2017
International regional coordination for LSD (GF-TADS)
LSD in SE Europe: Priorities in 2017
All countries that vaccinated against LSD in 2016 to repeatvaccination in 2017 as soon as possible (preferably beforeApril 2017)
National vaccine procurements are in progress. EU to assistwith vaccines from EU LSD vaccine bank + financial support for thenational purchase of vaccines (GF TADs teleconference on23.02.2017).
Ongoing selection of the call for tenders (closed 10 April) forthe purchase of 2,34 million doses of vaccines for the EU LSDvaccine bank