The WOAH Scientific and Technical Review, Vol.43 on ‘Global Burden of Animal Diseases’ is now available online here.
The edition is a series of research papers from the GBADs consortium and our partners on our methods, their application in case studies and the links to crop and human health. We would like to thank our WOAH colleagues for their skill and hard work in bringing this publication together.
Summary
- Foreword
- Preface
- Estimating livestock biomass across diverse populations and data ecosystems
- Methods and data needs to estimate the economic market value of livestock at different spatial scales
- Prevalence data on chicken diseases in low-resource settings
- A methodological framework for attributing the burden of animal disease to specific causes
- Loss of production and animal health costs in assessing economic burden of animal disease
- Ontologies related to livestock for the Global Burden of Animal Diseases programme: a review
- Linking animal and human health burden: challenges and opportunities
- Understanding decision-makers and their needs: framing Global Burden of Animal Diseases offerings to enhance relevance and increase impact
- Global Burden of Animal Diseases informatics strategy, data quality and model interoperability
- Interpretation and utility of the Animal Health Loss Envelope as part of the Global Burden of Animal Diseases analytical process
- Application of Global Burden of Animal Diseases methods at country level: experiences of the Ethiopia case study
- Partnerships for policy: initiating a Global Burden of Animal Diseases case study in Indonesia
- Scoping Study for the Implementation of a Case Study of the “Global Impact of Animal Diseases” Programme in Senegal
- A Collaborating Centre for animal health economics in the Americas
- The application of Global Burden of Animal Diseases methodology to aquatic animal production
- Burden assessment of antimicrobial use and resistance in livestock in data-scarce contexts
- How the Global Burden of Animal Diseases links to the Global Burden of Crop Loss: a food systems perspective
- Veterinary Services’ use of the Global Burden of Animal Diseases to prioritise interventions, monitor impact and develop critical competencies
If you have any questions relating to any of the publications included in Volume 43, please contact us!
