Your data on MRCVSonline
The nature of the services provided by Vision Media means that we might obtain certain information about you.
Please read our Data Protection and Privacy Policy for details.

In addition, (with your consent) some parts of our website may store a 'cookie' in your browser for the purposes of
functionality or performance monitoring.
Click here to manage your settings.
If you would like to forward this story on to a friend, simply fill in the form below and click send.

Your friend's email:
Your email:
Your name:
 
 
Send Cancel

Global health risk calls for urgent action
Professor Piot (left), Professor Reid and Clare Wilson of the New Scientist who led the debate.

Key leaders emphasise importance of One Health strategy

On 3 October, an important debate, discussing the global threat of anti-microbial resistance (AMR) and high risk disease, took place at the RVC, London.
 
The debate was spearheaded by Professor Stuart Reid, principal of the RVC, and Professor Peter Piot, director of the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine (LSHTM).

During the event, both leaders emphasised the importance of implementing the One Health policy, an initiative that both enables and uses pioneering research from the world’s experts, to protect the health of all species.
 
The risk of shared disease between humans and animals, combined with the decreased ability to treat them, is now considered to require urgent action by the RVC and LSHTM.
 
Professor Reid, an expert on AMR, and Professor Piot, founding executive director of UNAIDS and co-discoverer of Ebola, urged the importance of drastic and imminent action.

As leaders of the One Health movement, they emphasised that specialists from the medical, veterinary, political, economic and environmental sectors needed to work together in order to establish and execute global life saving measures.
 
The event, hosted in partnership with New Scientist, comes just weeks after UN Secretary General, Ban Ki-moon, acknowledged AMR as a “fundamental threat” to global health and emphasised immediate action via a One Health approach.
 
Professor Peter Piot, director of the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, said: “Fighting emerging infectious disease and drug resistance requires a multidisciplinary approach that considers the complex links between human and animal health. 

"Ebola, HIV, influenza, SARS and MERS are examples of epidemics that have jumped between species; and in the case of Zika, malaria, yellow fever and dengue, the microbe relies on an intermediary species, such as mosquitoes, to infect humans. These infections take an enormous toll on public health globally. 

"Research is essential to combat these deadly diseases, from developing vaccines to understanding human-animal transmission pathways. This, along with the rise of drug resistant strains of infectious agents, creates an urgency to act fast and to be better prepared.”
 
Professor Stuart Reid, Principal of the Royal Veterinary College, added: “There can be no bigger issue than the global threat of diseases for which may soon have no treatment. It is going to take the concerted effort of science, industry, governments and international organisations to address this impending catastrophe that is truly species independent and a One Health problem.

"Our focus must be to address the significant gaps in our understanding at the same time as doing what we know to be “the right thing” – everybody has a part to play and we must do it together.”
 
Clare Wilson, Medical News Reporter at New Scientist, said: “One of the greatest future threats to health is of a new infectious disease passing from animals to humans, such as HIV, Ebola and Zika have done in the past.

"We also know that antibiotic resistance, another grave public health challenge, is worsened by overuse of antibiotics in farming. So it’s vital that medical researchers in animal and human health work more closely together.”

Become a member or log in to add this story to your CPD history

Birmingham Dogs Home makes urgent appeal

News Story 1
 Birmingham Dogs Home has issued an urgent winter appeal as it faces more challenges over the Christmas period.

The rescue centre has seen a dramatic increase in dogs coming into its care, and is currently caring for over 200 dogs. With rising costs and dropping temperatures, the charity is calling for urgent support.

It costs the charity £6,000 per day to continue its work.

Fi Harrison, head of fundraising and communications, said: "It's heart-breaking for our team to see the conditions some dogs arrive in. We really are their last chance and hope of survival."

More information about the appeal can be found here

Click here for more...
News Shorts
Avian flu confirmed at premises in Cornwall

A case of highly pathogenic avian influenza H5N1 has been detected in commercial poultry at a premises near Rosudgeon, Cornwall.

All poultry on the infected site will be humanely culled, and a 3km protection zone and 10km surveillance zone have been put in place. Poultry and other captive birds in the 3km protection zone must be housed.

The case is the second avian flu case confirmed in commercial poultry this month. The H5N5 strain was detected in a premises near Hornsea, East Riding of Yorkshire, in early November. Before then, the disease had not been confirmed in captive birds in England since February.

The UK chief veterinary officer has urged bird keepers to remain alert and practise robust biosecurity.

A map of the disease control zones can be found here.