Animal pathogens and their impact on animal health, the economy, food security, food safety and public health

Revue Scientifique Et Technique
T F Mcelwain, S M Thumbi

Abstract

Animal pathogens attract attention in both the livestock and public health sectors for their impacts on socio-economics, food safety and security, and human health. These impacts are felt at the household, national, regional and global levels. Whereas the World Organisation for Animal Health (OIE) has identified 118 animal diseases as notifiable, based on their potential for impact on trade, there is a selected subset that have been classified as posing a greater threat to countries due to unique characteristics, such as being highly transmissible, spreading rapidly within and between countries, and requiring cooperation between several countries to control their spread or exclude them. While these 'transboundary diseases' are endemic in much of the world, particularly the developing nations, many countries are classified as disease free. Following the terrorist events of 11 September 2001 in the United States, a small group of zoonotic pathogens and a group of animal-specific pathogens (those that cause what are referred to as `high-consequence foreign animal diseases'), were classified as high-risk, biothreat 'select agents'. Rather than providing a comprehensive review of all animal pathogens, the authors briefly review the ...Continue Reading

Citations

Jul 1, 2020·Biomedical Chromatography : BMC·João Marcos G BarbosaNelson R Antoniosi Filho
Sep 26, 2020·Frontiers in Veterinary Science·Hussaini G UlaramuKris De Clercq
Jan 26, 2021·Frontiers in Veterinary Science·Zhiguo LiuZhenjun Li
Jan 12, 2021·Saudi Journal of Biological Sciences·Reem Al Jindan
Apr 16, 2021·The Journal of Biological Chemistry·Gustavo Fernando MercaldiCelso Eduardo Benedetti
Jun 19, 2021·Nature Reviews. Immunology·George M WarimweBryan Charleston

❮ Previous
Next ❯

Related Concepts

Related Feeds

Brucellosis

Brucellosis is a bacterial infection caused by members of the genus brucella and remains one of the world's major zoonotic diseases. Discover the latest research on Brucellosis here.

Brucellosis (ASM)

Brucellosis is a bacterial infection caused by members of the genus brucella and remains one of the world's major zoonotic diseases. Discover the latest research on Brucellosis here.