More appropriate disease control policies for the developing world

Investment in disease control should be targeted to critical points that provide the greatest benefit to the livelihoods of livestock-dependent stakeholders. Risk-based targeting should balance the impacts of diseases against the feasibility of their control. This requires sensitive and specific sur...

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Autor principal: Mariner, Jeffrey C.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: AOSIS 2009
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/373
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author Mariner, Jeffrey C.
author_browse Mariner, Jeffrey C.
author_facet Mariner, Jeffrey C.
author_sort Mariner, Jeffrey C.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Investment in disease control should be targeted to critical points that provide the greatest benefit to the livelihoods of livestock-dependent stakeholders. Risk-based targeting should balance the impacts of diseases against the feasibility of their control. This requires sensitive and specific surveillance systems that provide representative overviews of the animal health situation for accurate assessment of disease impact and transmission patterns. Assessment of impact should include household and market effects. The key in surveillance is involving livestock owners using active methods that ensure their disease priorities are addressed. Epidemiological targeting of interventions to critical points in disease transmission cycles should be done to obtain maximal disease reduction. Interventions should be delivered in full partnership with both private and community-based stakeholders to assure high uptake and sustainability. In developing countries, approaches such as participatory disease surveillance and community-based animal health programs have been effective and comply with international animal health standards.
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spelling CGSpace3732025-11-12T04:26:30Z More appropriate disease control policies for the developing world Mariner, Jeffrey C. Investment in disease control should be targeted to critical points that provide the greatest benefit to the livelihoods of livestock-dependent stakeholders. Risk-based targeting should balance the impacts of diseases against the feasibility of their control. This requires sensitive and specific surveillance systems that provide representative overviews of the animal health situation for accurate assessment of disease impact and transmission patterns. Assessment of impact should include household and market effects. The key in surveillance is involving livestock owners using active methods that ensure their disease priorities are addressed. Epidemiological targeting of interventions to critical points in disease transmission cycles should be done to obtain maximal disease reduction. Interventions should be delivered in full partnership with both private and community-based stakeholders to assure high uptake and sustainability. In developing countries, approaches such as participatory disease surveillance and community-based animal health programs have been effective and comply with international animal health standards. 2009 2010-01-10T11:51:37Z 2010-01-10T11:51:37Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/373 en Open Access application/pdf AOSIS Mariner, J.C. 2009. More appropriate disease control policies for the developing world. Onderstepoort Journal of Veterinary Research 76(1):135-140.
spellingShingle Mariner, Jeffrey C.
More appropriate disease control policies for the developing world
title More appropriate disease control policies for the developing world
title_full More appropriate disease control policies for the developing world
title_fullStr More appropriate disease control policies for the developing world
title_full_unstemmed More appropriate disease control policies for the developing world
title_short More appropriate disease control policies for the developing world
title_sort more appropriate disease control policies for the developing world
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/373
work_keys_str_mv AT marinerjeffreyc moreappropriatediseasecontrolpoliciesforthedevelopingworld