FAO seeks $20m to contain fresh bird flu outbreak in W-Africa
By Jimoh Babatunde
The Food and Agriculture Organization,
FAO is calling for a $20 million intervention fund for prevention
and response activities as it fears the highly virulent avian flu
virus H5N1 could spread across West Africa and beyond.
In a release yesterday, FAO said the
call follows outbreaks of the virus in poultry farms, markets and
family holdings in Nigeria, Burkina Faso, Niger, Cote d’Ivoire and
Ghana. The outbreak comes as countries across West Africa are still
recovering from, and in some cases still battling, Ebola. Avian flu
could trigger a mass die-off of chicken – a nutritious and
inexpensive source of food for many people– with detrimental
impacts on diets and on the economy of the region, exacerbating an
already difficult situation.
Previous strains of the virus – known
to be highly virulent to poultry and capable of causing illness and
fatalities in humans – have been circulating in Asia since the
early 2000s and in Egypt for almost 10 years.
The H5N1 strain has caused the death of
tens of millions of poultry and losses of tens of billions of
dollars.
While the first incursion of the H5N1
in West Africa occurred in 2006 it was eliminated by 2008. In late
2014, however, the virus was re-introduced in Nigeria, where it
spread rapidly in the following three months – to date more than
1.6 million birds have been culled or have died from the virus.
Because the disease can be transmitted to humans and is considered
highly lethal, FAO is working closely with the World Health
Organization on country assessments, contingency plans, offering
technical assistance and investigating potential flu cases and the
source of infection.
FAO assessment missions to Benin,
Cameroon, Mali and Togo – undertaken in collaboration with the
World Organisation for Animal Health, the African Union, and in some
cases with the World Bank – have not identified cases of H5N1 in
poultry, but these countries and other countries in the Sub-Region
need to ensure that prevention and preparedness measures are in
place. “Based on what we do know, there is a real risk of further
virus spread.
Urgent action is needed to strengthen
veterinary investigation and reporting systems in the region and
tackle the disease at the root, before there is a spillover to
humans,” said Juan Lubroth, Chief of FAO’s Animal Health Service
Division.
Prevention and response
FAO’s appeal for $20 million for
prevention and response foresees bolstering weak veterinary systems,
improving the capabilities of local laboratories and putting FAO
specialists on the ground in affected and at-risk countries.
In the countries that have experienced
outbreaks, response interventions include destruction of infected and
exposed poultry, disinfection of premises and markets and the safe
disposal of dead birds. Veterinary officers, meanwhile, are
encouraged to use basic techniques like “trace-forward” –
which looks at where infected animals have been sold or moved to –
and “trace backward” – examining where infected animals were
purchased or where they came from – to find sources with the
ultimate goal of halting continuous virus introduction or further
spread.
Although quality vaccines are
available, the vaccination strategy to be implemented poses certain
challenges in some countries and there is always a risk of creating a
false sense of security by assuming that the administration of a dose
of vaccine will resolve all threats. Instead, behavioral changes . –
including enhanced hygiene routines, good poultry production, and
safe transportation practices of healthy animals – ought to be at
the heart of prevention plans, according to FAO.
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