Transcript Slide 1

Operationalizing One Health: The Bangladesh Experience
Nitish C Debnath, DVM, MS, PhD
FAO-AI Technical Unit/ECTAD-Bangladesh
The beginning of a One Health journey
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Informal discussion began at Chittagong Veterinary Animal Sciences University
(CVASU) in 2007 at the emergence of HPAI
Looking for relevant partners to move forward
IEDCR and ICDDR,B showed keen interest as human health partners
Positive responses from professionals working in Livestock, Agriculture and
Forestry sector
Civil society-BAPA, NGO-BRAC, Academia-BAU, DU & BSMRMU and ResearchBLRI, IFRB etc. got involved
Formation of a brand new team
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Representatives from 12 national and international organizations got together to
form a professional organization called One Health Bangladesh in December 2007
Formed a National Coordination Committee to work for promoting One Health
concept in Bangladesh
Membership criteria: Physicians, vets, agriculturists, environmentalists, wildlife
experts, ecologists, anthropologists, economists, allied scientists and practitioners,
activists
Currently 200 active members
One Health Bangladesh initiative
One Health Alliance of South Asia (OHASA)
Chittagong Declaration (2008)
Bengal Declaration (2009)
Highlights
Highlights
 All professions related to the health, livestock, social and environment sciences should understand
the importance of the “One health” approach and work together.
 All health professionals, Government and local people be made aware about the holistic approach
and regulatory matters.
 Organizing training and developing communication pathway between and among the professionals is
essential;
 That develops strong bridge with the “One health” global initiatives.
 That initiatives should be taken for developing training, education and research programmes on the
“One Health” concept.
 Development of suitable health services to the most neglected population in the remote rural areas of
the country.
 Enhancement of interdisciplinary communications on cross-cutting issues.
 Reduction of institutional and mental barriers for undertaking need-based multi-disciplinary research,
training and extension programmes.
 Seminar, symposia and open discussions should be staged on regular basis to take the “One world,
one health” movement further forward
The achievements and affiliations to date
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5 year, USAID-funded project
Builds upon USAID/USG investments in avian and pandemic influenza preparedness and response
Expands efforts to address emerging zoonotic infections more generally, especially those of wildlife origin
Vets, physicians and wildlife experts are undertaking collaborative research on EIDs
Formulation of two One Health oriented declarations namely Chittagong declaration and Bengal declaration to
stimulate greater multisectoral participation
 Actively involved with OHASA (One Health alliance for South Asia)
 Initiate SAVE (South Asian Veterinary Education Network) to Develop thinking and practices in South Asia in
relation to One Health and to embed One Health in Veterinary Curriculum through SAVE
 FAO supported development of BLRN (Bangladesh Laboratory Response Network) with a vision of progressively
attaining an effective community of practices focus on fostering nation’s lab. capacity to promote One Health
strategy for facing the challenges of emerging human and animal health emergencies & food safety
The key strategic approaches
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Communication, Advocacy , Networking & leadership
Need Assessment & Capacity Development
Research Collaboration
Education & Training
Collaborative Practices
Activities of One health-Bangladesh
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One Health practices in Bangladesh:
Successful joint outbreak Investigation in recent years include-
Joint outbreak investigation – The Anthrax story
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Multidisciplinary team visiting outbreak sites
Joint Reporting & Consultation
Share laboratory findings
Joint response to national EID outbreaks
A new professional culture emerging
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Pesticide poisoning (2008)
Avian influenza (2008)
Nipah virus (2009)
Anthrax (2009)
Challenges of One health in Bangladesh
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Number of cases
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Six international conferences and seminars have already been
organised by this forum on some recent multidimensional
burning issues
Conference on Changing world and emerging challenges: A One
World One Health Approach – 2008 at CVASU, Chittagong,
Bangladesh
Dhaka Conference on Avian Influenza and other emerging
zoonotic diseases in Bangladesh: A One World One Health
Approach – 2008 at ICDDR,B
Conference on Food security and food safety: Towards a A One
World One Health Approach – 2009 at CVASU, Chittagong,
Bangladesh
Seminar on Swine Flu in 2009 at IEDCR, Dhaka, Bangladesh
Seminar on Pesticide Poisoning in 2009 at ICDDR,B, Dhaka,
Bangladesh
 Signing a Memorandum of Understanding between relevant agencies/ministries that will create a communication
network to report emerging zoonotic disease surveillance results and coordinate response activities;
 Establishing an Interagency Task Force (ITF) that meets between the governments that will be responsible for the
development of standardized reporting guidelines and protocols both within and between government agencies.
 Creating a network of diagnostic laboratories in India and Bangladesh that will test wildlife samples for zoonotic
pathogens.
 Promoting the investigation of all wildlife disease outbreaks and establishing a real-time, web-based disease
reporting mechanism.
 Allocating government funds, and funds from other national and international non-governmental agencies to
support this research in emergent zoonotic disease surveillance.
 Establishing One Health programs at relevant institutions to enhance public health effectiveness, increase
understanding of the impact of anthropogenic changes on the emergence of new pathogens of animal and human
origin, and accelerating biomedical research discoveries
 Enhancing public health education through public outreach campaigns and professional workshops and seminars
that use the One Health paradigm to bridge disciplines and increase general awareness of the links among human,
animal, and ecosystem health.
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Sequence of events in a 2009 outbreak of anthrax in
Bangladesh where joint outbreak investigation were in place.
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Figure courtesy of IEDCR and ICDDR,B, Dhaka, Bangladesh
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Many deaths of animal and human are
reported due to pesticide poisoning each
year, as a result of unsafe use of often
banned products in Bangladesh.
Highest population density in the world
Hot spots for EIDs and Re-emerging diseases
Vulnerable food security and safety
Most fragile ecosystems
50% of the tube wells exceed WHO standard for arsenic
People are exceptionally close to animal
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August
Hundreds of cows have been infected and scores have
died during recent outbreak of anthrax in Bangladesh
where meat quality and safety issues are mostly ignored
Anthrax has emerged as zoonotic disease in Bangladesh
where non-inspected or illegal slaughter of sick animal is
frequent in rural as well as urban areas
Animal slaughtered
2nd human outbreak
Not associated with slaughtered cows
September
October
1st human outbreak
3rd Human outbreak
Around 1.25 million birds have been culled in Banglaesh since
2007 when avian flu was first reported
The live bird market in Bangladesh where active
surveillance are in place to identify the risk of
human infection for avian influenza
Recent ICDDR,B studies have shown that fruit bats (Pteropus
giganteus) often contaminate the date-palm juice which is so popular in
rural Bangladesh during the winter months.
The distribution of Nipah virus in Bangladesh
as found by ICDDR,B researchers which
comprised a joint team of vets, physicians,
anthropologists and conservationists.
The poster is presented in the 1st International Congress on Pathogens at the Human-Animal Interface(ICOPHAI), September 15-17, 2011: UN Conference Centre, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.