Healthy lives: Tackling food-borne diseases and zoonoses

The International Livestock Research Institute (ILRI) was created in the early 1990s, and, like CGIAR crop centres, its major goal was increasing productivity. Animal health was believed to cause about one-fourth of the yield gaps seen in developing countries, but almost all research centreed on...

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Main Authors: Grace, Delia, Roesel, Kristina, Bett, Bernard K., Unger, Fred
Format: Ponencia
Language:Inglés
Published: International Livestock Research Institute 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/44918
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author Grace, Delia
Roesel, Kristina
Bett, Bernard K.
Unger, Fred
author_browse Bett, Bernard K.
Grace, Delia
Roesel, Kristina
Unger, Fred
author_facet Grace, Delia
Roesel, Kristina
Bett, Bernard K.
Unger, Fred
author_sort Grace, Delia
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description The International Livestock Research Institute (ILRI) was created in the early 1990s, and, like CGIAR crop centres, its major goal was increasing productivity. Animal health was believed to cause about one-fourth of the yield gaps seen in developing countries, but almost all research centreed on just two diseases thought to have greatest impacts on productivity: trypanosomosis and East Coast fever. Human health impacts were explicitly not a priority. By 2000 ILRI began actively to address zoonoses, but only in the context of their threat to intensifying smallholder production. By 2004, human health was an objective in its own right and the first research programme dedicated to zoonoses and food safety at ILRI began in 2011. During the period of increasing focus on the human health implications of smallholder livestock production, some major research achievements were made, including: the first pro-poor ranking of zoonoses research priorities; reliable assessments of milk safety in Kenya’s informal markets; use of participatory disease surveillance methods for avian influenza; applications of risk-based approaches to food safety in informal markets; development of new diagnostic tests for pig tapeworm; a global mapping of poverty and zoonoses; and deployment of a decision-support tool for control of Rift Valley fever. Evidence generated over the last decade and a half shows the three most important livestock-associated human health problems are food-borne disease, emerging infectious disease, and nutritional problems associated with eating too much or too little animal-source food. Current research on these topics by ILRI and partners extends from upstream projects hunting for viruses and generating vaccines, to the development, marketing and testing of diverse livestock technologies, to piloting practical approaches to disease surveillance and control in resource-scarce environments.
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spelling CGSpace449182025-11-04T19:55:48Z Healthy lives: Tackling food-borne diseases and zoonoses Grace, Delia Roesel, Kristina Bett, Bernard K. Unger, Fred animal diseases animal health health zoonoses The International Livestock Research Institute (ILRI) was created in the early 1990s, and, like CGIAR crop centres, its major goal was increasing productivity. Animal health was believed to cause about one-fourth of the yield gaps seen in developing countries, but almost all research centreed on just two diseases thought to have greatest impacts on productivity: trypanosomosis and East Coast fever. Human health impacts were explicitly not a priority. By 2000 ILRI began actively to address zoonoses, but only in the context of their threat to intensifying smallholder production. By 2004, human health was an objective in its own right and the first research programme dedicated to zoonoses and food safety at ILRI began in 2011. During the period of increasing focus on the human health implications of smallholder livestock production, some major research achievements were made, including: the first pro-poor ranking of zoonoses research priorities; reliable assessments of milk safety in Kenya’s informal markets; use of participatory disease surveillance methods for avian influenza; applications of risk-based approaches to food safety in informal markets; development of new diagnostic tests for pig tapeworm; a global mapping of poverty and zoonoses; and deployment of a decision-support tool for control of Rift Valley fever. Evidence generated over the last decade and a half shows the three most important livestock-associated human health problems are food-borne disease, emerging infectious disease, and nutritional problems associated with eating too much or too little animal-source food. Current research on these topics by ILRI and partners extends from upstream projects hunting for viruses and generating vaccines, to the development, marketing and testing of diverse livestock technologies, to piloting practical approaches to disease surveillance and control in resource-scarce environments. 2014-09-17 2014-10-07T09:08:59Z 2014-10-07T09:08:59Z Presentation https://hdl.handle.net/10568/44918 en Open Access application/pdf International Livestock Research Institute Grace, D., Roesel, K., Bett, B. and Unger, F. 2014. Healthy lives: Tackling food-borne diseases and zoonoses. Presented at the Tropentag 2014 Conference on Bridging the Gap between Increasing Knowledge and Decreasing Resources, Prague, Czech Republic, 17-19 September 2014. Nairobi, Kenya: ILRI.
spellingShingle animal diseases
animal health
health
zoonoses
Grace, Delia
Roesel, Kristina
Bett, Bernard K.
Unger, Fred
Healthy lives: Tackling food-borne diseases and zoonoses
title Healthy lives: Tackling food-borne diseases and zoonoses
title_full Healthy lives: Tackling food-borne diseases and zoonoses
title_fullStr Healthy lives: Tackling food-borne diseases and zoonoses
title_full_unstemmed Healthy lives: Tackling food-borne diseases and zoonoses
title_short Healthy lives: Tackling food-borne diseases and zoonoses
title_sort healthy lives tackling food borne diseases and zoonoses
topic animal diseases
animal health
health
zoonoses
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/44918
work_keys_str_mv AT gracedelia healthylivestacklingfoodbornediseasesandzoonoses
AT roeselkristina healthylivestacklingfoodbornediseasesandzoonoses
AT bettbernardk healthylivestacklingfoodbornediseasesandzoonoses
AT ungerfred healthylivestacklingfoodbornediseasesandzoonoses