Brucellosis in India: results of a collaborative workshop to define One Health priorities

Brucellosis is an important zoonosis worldwide. In livestock, it frequently causes chronic disease with reproductive failures that contribute to production losses, and in humans, it causes an often-chronic febrile illness that is frequently underdiagnosed in many low- and middle-income countries, in...

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Veröffentlicht in:Tropical animal health and production 2020, Vol.52 (1), p.387-396
Hauptverfasser: Lindahl, Johanna F., Vrentas, Catherine E., Deka, Ram P., Hazarika, Razibuddin A., Rahman, H., Bambal, R. G., Bedi, J. S., Bhattacharya, C., Chaduhuri, Pallab, Fairoze, Nadeem Mohamed, Gandhi, R. S., Gill, J. P. S., Gupta, N. K., Kumar, M., Londhe, S., Rahi, M., Sharma, P. K., Shome, R., Singh, R., Srinivas, K., Swain, B. B.
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container_issue 1
container_start_page 387
container_title Tropical animal health and production
container_volume 52
creator Lindahl, Johanna F.
Vrentas, Catherine E.
Deka, Ram P.
Hazarika, Razibuddin A.
Rahman, H.
Bambal, R. G.
Bedi, J. S.
Bhattacharya, C.
Chaduhuri, Pallab
Fairoze, Nadeem Mohamed
Gandhi, R. S.
Gill, J. P. S.
Gupta, N. K.
Kumar, M.
Londhe, S.
Rahi, M.
Sharma, P. K.
Shome, R.
Singh, R.
Srinivas, K.
Swain, B. B.
description Brucellosis is an important zoonosis worldwide. In livestock, it frequently causes chronic disease with reproductive failures that contribute to production losses, and in humans, it causes an often-chronic febrile illness that is frequently underdiagnosed in many low- and middle-income countries, including India. India has one of the largest ruminant populations in the world, and brucellosis is endemic in the country in both humans and animals. In November 2017, the International Livestock Research Institute invited experts from government, national research institutes, universities, and different international organizations to a one-day meeting to set priorities towards a “One Health” control strategy for brucellosis in India. Using a risk prioritization exercise followed by discussions, the meeting agreed on the following priorities: collaboration (transboundary and transdisciplinary); collection of more epidemiological evidence in humans, cattle, and in small ruminants (which have been neglected in past research); Economic impact studies, including cost effectiveness of control programmes; livestock vaccination, including national facilities for securing vaccines for the cattle population; management of infected animals (with the ban on bovine slaughter, alternatives such as sanctuaries must be explored); laboratory capacities and diagnostics (quality must be assured and better rapid tests developed); and increased awareness, making farmers, health workers, and the general public more aware of risks of brucellosis and zoonoses in general. Overall, the meeting participants agreed that brucellosis control will be challenging in India, but with collaboration to address the priority areas listed here, it could be possible.
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India has one of the largest ruminant populations in the world, and brucellosis is endemic in the country in both humans and animals. In November 2017, the International Livestock Research Institute invited experts from government, national research institutes, universities, and different international organizations to a one-day meeting to set priorities towards a “One Health” control strategy for brucellosis in India. Using a risk prioritization exercise followed by discussions, the meeting agreed on the following priorities: collaboration (transboundary and transdisciplinary); collection of more epidemiological evidence in humans, cattle, and in small ruminants (which have been neglected in past research); Economic impact studies, including cost effectiveness of control programmes; livestock vaccination, including national facilities for securing vaccines for the cattle population; management of infected animals (with the ban on bovine slaughter, alternatives such as sanctuaries must be explored); laboratory capacities and diagnostics (quality must be assured and better rapid tests developed); and increased awareness, making farmers, health workers, and the general public more aware of risks of brucellosis and zoonoses in general. 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B.</creatorcontrib><creatorcontrib>Sveriges lantbruksuniversitet</creatorcontrib><title>Brucellosis in India: results of a collaborative workshop to define One Health priorities</title><title>Tropical animal health and production</title><addtitle>Trop Anim Health Prod</addtitle><addtitle>Trop Anim Health Prod</addtitle><description>Brucellosis is an important zoonosis worldwide. In livestock, it frequently causes chronic disease with reproductive failures that contribute to production losses, and in humans, it causes an often-chronic febrile illness that is frequently underdiagnosed in many low- and middle-income countries, including India. India has one of the largest ruminant populations in the world, and brucellosis is endemic in the country in both humans and animals. In November 2017, the International Livestock Research Institute invited experts from government, national research institutes, universities, and different international organizations to a one-day meeting to set priorities towards a “One Health” control strategy for brucellosis in India. Using a risk prioritization exercise followed by discussions, the meeting agreed on the following priorities: collaboration (transboundary and transdisciplinary); collection of more epidemiological evidence in humans, cattle, and in small ruminants (which have been neglected in past research); Economic impact studies, including cost effectiveness of control programmes; livestock vaccination, including national facilities for securing vaccines for the cattle population; management of infected animals (with the ban on bovine slaughter, alternatives such as sanctuaries must be explored); laboratory capacities and diagnostics (quality must be assured and better rapid tests developed); and increased awareness, making farmers, health workers, and the general public more aware of risks of brucellosis and zoonoses in general. 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subjects Animal populations
Animals
Biomedical and Life Sciences
Brucella
Brucellosis
Cattle
Chronic illnesses
Clinical Science
Collaboration
Cost effectiveness
Dairy Science and Health in the Tropics
Economic impact
Epidemiology
Health
Impact analysis
India
International organizations
Klinisk vetenskap
Life Sciences
Livestock
Medical personnel
Priorities
Public health
Quality assurance
Regular Articles
Research facilities
Sanctuaries
Vaccines
Veterinary Medicine/Veterinary Science
Zoology
Zoonoses
title Brucellosis in India: results of a collaborative workshop to define One Health priorities
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