Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) Headquarters, Viale delle Terme di Caracalla, 00153 Rome, Italy.
Department of Pathobiology and Population Sciences, FAO Reference Centre in Veterinary Epidemiology, World Organisation for Animal Health (WOAH) Collaborating Centre in Risk Analysis and Modelling, Royal Veterinary College, University of London, Hatfield, Herts AL9 9TA, UK.
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2023 Oct 9;378(1887):20220407. doi: 10.1098/rstb.2022.0407. Epub 2023 Aug 21.
Zoonotic diseases (zoonoses) originating from domestic animals pose a significant risk to people's health and livelihoods, in addition to jeopardizing animal health and production. Effective surveillance of endemic zoonoses at the animal level is crucial to assessing the disease burden and risk, and providing early warning to prevent epidemics in animals and spillover to humans. Here we aimed to prioritize and characterize zoonoses for which surveillance in domestic animals is important to prevent human infections at a global scale. A multi-criteria qualitative approach was used, where disease-specific information was obtained across literature of the leading international health organizations. Thirty-two zoonoses were prioritized, all of which have multi-regional spread, cause unexceptional human infections and have domestic animal hosts as important sources or sentinels of zoonotic infections. Most diseases involve multiple animal hosts and/or modes of zoonotic transmission, where a lack of specific clinical signs in animals further complicates surveillance. We discuss the challenges of animal health surveillance in endemic and resource-limited settings, as well as potential avenues for improvement such as the multi-disease, multi-sectoral and digital surveillance approaches. Our study will support global capacity-building efforts to strengthen the surveillance and control of endemic zoonoses at their animal sources. This article is part of the theme issue 'Challenges and opportunities in the fight against neglected tropical diseases: a decade from the London Declaration on NTDs'.
动物源传染病(人畜共患病)不仅对动物健康和生产构成威胁,还对人类健康和生计构成重大风险。有效监测动物层面的地方性人畜共患病对于评估疾病负担和风险以及提供早期预警以防止动物传染病暴发和向人类溢出至关重要。在这里,我们旨在确定和描述需要在动物中进行监测以预防全球人类感染的人畜共患病,这是优先考虑的事项。使用了多标准定性方法,从主要国际卫生组织的文献中获得了针对每种疾病的具体信息。确定了 32 种优先考虑的人畜共患病,这些疾病均具有多区域传播性,导致非典型人类感染,并且动物宿主是重要的人畜共患病感染源或哨兵。大多数疾病涉及多种动物宿主和/或人畜共患病传播模式,而动物中缺乏特定的临床症状进一步使监测复杂化。我们讨论了在地方性和资源有限环境中进行动物健康监测的挑战,以及可能的改进途径,例如多疾病、多部门和数字监测方法。我们的研究将支持全球能力建设努力,以加强对动物源地方性人畜共患病的监测和控制。本文是主题为“抗击被忽视的热带病的挑战和机遇:伦敦被忽视的热带病宣言十周年”的一部分。