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GF-TADs for Asia and the Pacific – SC4 – Bangkok July 1-2 2010
GF-TADs for Asia and the Pacific Fourth Steering Committee (SC4)
Bangkok, July 1 and 2 2010
Presentation of Global SC of GF-TADs InitiativeProgress Report (reporting period: SC3 – SC4)
[Global GF-TADs Secretariat]
GF-TADs for Asia and the Pacific – SC4 – Bangkok July 1-2 2010
Content
Governance aspects (slides 3 6)Technical aspects (slides 7 18)Financial aspects (slide 19)Communication aspects (slide 20)
GF-TADs for Asia and the Pacific – SC4 – Bangkok July 1-2 2010
• Governance aspectsFraming institutional documents- Millennium Development Goals (mostly 1, 6, 7 and 8)
- FAO-OIE Agreement (2004)
- FAO-OIE GF-TADs Agreement (2004)
- FAO-OIE Chart of competencies and complementarities (GSC2 Rec 6) (2008)
- FAO-OIE-WHO Tripartite Note (Hanoi, 2010)Vision: ‘ A world capable of preventing, detecting, containing, eliminating and responding to animal and public health risks attributable to zoonoses and animal diseases with an impact on food security through multi-sector cooperation and strong partnership’
GF-TADs for Asia and the Pacific – SC4 – Bangkok July 1-2 2010
• Governance aspectsGlobal governance bodies
Global Steering committee- Composition GSC2 (Rec 2 and 3) (including wildlife GSC2 (Rec 5)- Roles (ToRs endorsed GSC2 Rec 1)- Meetings: SC1; SC2; SC3 (September 16 and 17 2010, OIE HQ)
Management Committee- Composition GSC2 (Rec 2 and 3)- Roles (ToRs endorsed GSC2 Rec 1)- Meetings: MC1; MC2
Global Secretariat- Set up at FAO HQ (GSC2 Rec 4)- Composition-Roles (ToRs endorsed
GSC2 Rec )
Global Steering Committee
Management Committee
Global Secretariat
Regional Steering Committees (5)
Regional Secretariats (5)
FAO OIE Roles in the
GF-TADs
Advisory (global)
Decision (global)
Facilitator/monitoring
(global)
Decision (regional)
Facilitator/monitoring (regional)
GF-TADs for Asia and the Pacific – SC4 – Bangkok July 1-2 2010
• Governance aspectsSecond evaluation of the GF-TADs
Main conclusions (to be officially presented in the SC3, GSC2 Rec 7):‘in a short time and in a difficult animal health context, GF-TADs has proved its usefulness and has achieved significant results for the benefit of animal health worldwide’. Rec 50 of the evaluation: “It is recommended that the FAO-OIE collaboration on the control of transboundary diseases should be continued and strengthened”
Efforts to sustain in:- ↗ External communication / publicity / lobbying for the GF-TADs- ↗ Internal communication (GSC <--> RSCs; RSCs <--> RSCs)- ↗ Collaboration with WHO (GSC2 Rec 18)- ↗ Collaboration RSCs <--> RAHCs- ↗ roles of the RSCs (prioritization; initiate programs; monitoring of programs, etc)- ↗ roles of the RSOs within the RSCs- ↗ Networks (laboratory and epidemiosurveillance)MC response under development (GSC2 Rec #8), to be presented in SC3
GF-TADs for Asia and the Pacific – SC4 – Bangkok July 1-2 2010
• Governance aspects
Important issues
- RAHCs (GSC2 Rec 10)- in depth evaluation
postponed- RAHC Vade Mecum (under
development) (MC1 Rec 3)
RAHC for Asia and the Pacific- ‘Virtual’ RAHC in Bangkok- Feasibility for a RAHC in Katmandu (GSC2 Rec 11)- Feasibility for a RAHC in the Stan countries (under the GF-TADs for Europe)
GaboroneFAO – OIE - IBAR
BangkokFAO – OIE
BeirutFAO – OIE
NairobiFAO – OIE - IBAR
Katmandu
Ankara
• Existing
• Pipeline (?)
• Virtual
GF-TADs for Asia and the Pacific – SC4 – Bangkok July 1-2 2010
• Technical aspectsFraming technical documents
FAO-OIE Good governance document (2006) (GSC2 Rec 13)
FAO-OIE OWOH Strategy (under development)
GF-TADs 5-year action plan (under development)
(GSC2 Rec 9)
Multi-agency One World One Health Strategic
framework (2008)
GF-TADs for Asia and the Pacific – SC4 – Bangkok July 1-2 2010
• Technical aspectsPriority interventions
GF-TADs priorities at the global level:
Disease oriented: priority list = GLEWS list / up scaling of regional priority diseases - Topic oriented: examples biosecurity; reinforcing VS- Livestock chain oriented: example: small ruminants
- Set up of GF-TADs Working Groups at the global and regional levels to guide the priority actions (generic ToRs under development)
Global Steering Committee
Management Committee
Global Secretariat
Regional Steering Committees (5)
Regional Secretariats (5)
FAO OIE
WG FMD
WG RVF
WG (networks)
GF-TADs for Asia and the Pacific – SC4 – Bangkok July 1-2 2010
• Technical aspectsPriority disease interventions
AAA – Foot and Mouth disease
- Global Strategy (GSC2 Rec 14 iii)- Progressive Control Pathway approach (GSC2 Rec 15 ii) [details slides 9, 10 and 11]- Global Working group (under development)- Regional roadmap (started for Africa and the Middle-East; Asia?)- Studies on FMD economic and food security impact in enzootic settings MC GSC2 Rec 8 iii) (under development)- Next international conference on FMD
GF-TADs for Asia and the Pacific – SC4 – Bangkok July 1-2 2010
• Technical aspectsProgressive Control Pathway approach for FMD
Stages in the progressive control of FMD OIE Code only recognizes “FMD free” (with or without vac.)
Progressive control realizes that • differences in epidemiological situation exist between (and within) infected countries• countries are at different stages in managing the risk of FMDV infection
- from continuous circulation of FMDV- to sporadic outbreaks, originating from import of infection to the country, that are quickly brought under control
GF-TADs for Asia and the Pacific – SC4 – Bangkok July 1-2 2010
• Technical aspectsProgressive Control Pathway approach for FMD
Stage 0 (risk not controlled; continuous circulation of FMD virus)
Stage 1 (epidemiological studies, critical risk points known, virus strains known, at least in cattle and buffalo’s)
Stage 2 (Control measures critical points, full surveillance, outbreaks investigated, incidence
Stage 3 (Response to each outbreak, approaching freedom)
Stage 4 (Officially Free with vaccination)
Stage 5 (without) Disease
free
Disease not free
Level to be targeted
OIE recognized stages 4 & 5
OIE endorsed (?) stage 3
GF-TADs supported (?) stages 1 and 2
OIE FMD ad hoc group
(work under development)
GF-TADs for Asia and the Pacific – SC4 – Bangkok July 1-2 2010
• Technical aspectsProgressive Control Pathway approach for FMD
Example of the Africa Roadmap progression to 2020
2009 2020
Similar PCP approach to be used for progressive control of other animal diseases:- PPR- Brucellosis
GF-TADs for Asia and the Pacific – SC4 – Bangkok July 1-2 2010
• Technical aspectsPriority disease interventions
BBB – Rinderpest (GSC2 Rec 14 iv and 15 i)
- Joint Committee
- Post eradication strategy (sequestration, surveillance, disease management)
- Roadmap:
October 2010 June 2011
End of field operations Official declaration (FAO Conference)
May 2011
OIE 79th GS
GF-TADs for Asia and the Pacific – SC4 – Bangkok July 1-2 2010
Mai 2009 Avril 2010
Statut non indemne de peste bovineStatut indemne de peste bovine
- Surveillance to implement before June 2010:Kazakhstan, Saudia Arabia, Sri Lanka, and United Arab Emirates- OIE dossiers formulation: Liberia, Sierra Leone, Gambia, Comoros, Sao Tome and Principe
May 2009 April 2010
GF-TADs for Asia and the Pacific – SC4 – Bangkok July 1-2 2010
Priority disease interventions
CCC – Peste des Petits Ruminants
- Progressive control of PPR? (GSC2 Rec 14 iv)
- GF-TADs Global strategy (under development)
- Economic studies (GSC2 Rec 7 iv) (under development)
• Technical aspects
GF-TADs for Asia and the Pacific – SC4 – Bangkok July 1-2 2010
• Technical aspectsPriority disease interventions
DDD – Rift Valley Fever
- Feasibility study for a Global strategy (GSC2 Rec 14 v) (under development)
- Global Working group (under development)
GF-TADs for Asia and the Pacific – SC4 – Bangkok July 1-2 2010
• Technical aspectsPriority disease interventions
EEE – Animal Influenza
- Hanoi international Conference
- Combating in enzootic countries
- 5 remaining enzootic agro-ecosystems: China; Egypt; India/Bangladesh (Indo-Gangetic plain); Indonesia; Vietnam (greater Mekong)
GF-TADs for Asia and the Pacific – SC4 – Bangkok July 1-2 2010
• Technical aspectsPriority topic interventions
FFF – Networks
- Strengthening of network (GSC2 Rec 14 i)
- Reference labs networks (GSC2 Rec 9)
• Global– OFFLU– GLEWS– CMC-AH– FMD / CSF
• Regional– FETPV– Veterinary Epi Consortium
• Sub-Regional– South Asia– West, East, North,
Southern Africa– North Africa / southern
Europe (REMESA)• National or Bilateral
GF-TADs for Asia and the Pacific – SC4 – Bangkok July 1-2 2010
• Financial aspects5 year Strategic programme under development
Basic needs (‘metabolisme de base’) assessed to USD 2.1 million (5 years)
Fund raising needed (strategy to be decided during GSC3)
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