Interventions to support One Health and hygienic markets
1. Interventions to support One
Health and hygienic markets
Jimmy Smith
Director General
International Livestock Research Institute (ILRI)
BIFAD 181st public meeting
Food security and nutrition in the context of COVID-19
4 June 2020
Better lives through livestock
2. 2
Key messages
A One Health approach is essential to ensure food and nutrition
security and resilience for the whole world
Human, animal and environment health must be integrated across all
levels, from grassroots to national ministries to global initiatives and
organizations
One Health provides practical approaches to improving fresh markets
without jeopardizing food and nutrition security or resilience
3. 3
COVID-19: a harsh reminder of inextricable linkages in the food
system
Human
EnvironmentAnimal
One Health
One Health matters
• We have known for a long time
• Past pandemics…..bird flu, swine flu, MERS, SARS
• Why hasn’t this worked?
• Does it make economic sense?
4. 4
One Health and the institutional opportunity
(Figure 5, p26 World Bank. 2010. People, Pathogens and Our Planet. Volume 1: Towards a One Health Approach for Controlling Zoonotic Diseases. Report No. 50833-GLB)
From
grassroots…..to
ministries…to
regional and global
5. 5
One Health is cost-effective to reduce the likelihood of future pandemics
Better animal disease surveillance, and a One Health approach could save billions by addressing disease
outbreaks in animals rather than people as timely ‘sentinels’
A global investment of US$25 billion over 10 years in One Health could generate benefits worth at least
US$125 billion
World Bank. 2012. People, Pathogens and Our Planet. Volume 2. The Economics of One Health. Report No. 69145-GLB.
7. 7
Throughout the value chain – to market
Producer
Trader
Processor
Vendor
Consumer
Human
EnvironmentAnimal
Human
EnvironmentAnimal
People, animals and their products
interact in multiple ways with diverse
environments
8. 8
Interventions: to improve not prohibit
Enabling (regulatory) environment
• Risk based – not hazard based command/control
• Co-create solutions to improve
• Enhance the benefits of fresh food markets
• Target and tailor regulations to issues (eg wildlife NOT all animal markets)
• Be aware of unintended consequences
Training and simple technology
• Regular, short, simple, innovative, gender sensitive training
• Markers of training (posters, certificates, white coats…..)
• Simple, effective solutions (cutting boards, disinfectant, safe containers)
Incentives
• All consumers recognize and will pay (more) for safer food
• Certificates, recognition
• Understand and promote (‘nudge’) behavioural changes
9. 9
One Health and fresh food markets for food, nutrition and
resilience
Food
Local consumers on daily
wage
Fresh food daily
Producers daily income
Nutrition
Fresh not processed
Small daily quantities of
highly nutritious foods
(no fridge!)
Resilience
Varied and nutritious diet
Regular food even on low
income
Well nourished children
more resilient and
healthier, less likely to be
stunted
10. 10
Key messages
A One Health approach is essential to ensure food and nutrition
security and resilience for the whole world
Human, animal and environment health must be integrated across all
levels, from grassroots to national ministries to global initiatives and
organizations
One Health provides practical approaches to improving fresh markets
without jeopardizing food and nutrition security or resilience
Grace, D., 2014, ‘The business case for One Health’, Onderstepoort Journal of Veterinary Research 81(2), Art. #725, 6 pages. http://dx.doi. org/10.4102/ojvr.v81i2.725
Photo credits:
ILRI/HUPH/Ngan Tran
EADD/Neil Thomas
ILRI/Jules Mateo
A work-station at a local slaughterhouse in the Vietnamese central highland province of Binh Phuoc (photo credit: ILRI/Andrew Nguyen).
Carcass surfaces is roasted with a gas burner in the market in Phnom Penh, Cambodia (photo credit: ILRI/ Fred Unger)
China in 2005 (photo credit: ILRI/ Stevie Mann).