Quantifying cost of disease in livestock: a new metric for the Global Burden of Animal Diseases

IF 24.1 1区 医学 Q1 ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES Lancet Planetary Health Pub Date : 2024-05-01 DOI:10.1016/S2542-5196(24)00047-0
William Gilbert PhD , Prof Thomas L Marsh PhD , Gemma Chaters PhD , Wudu T Jemberu PhD , Mieghan Bruce PhD , Wilma Steeneveld PhD , Joao S Afonso PhD , Benjamin Huntington BVetMed3 , Prof Jonathan Rushton PhD
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Abstract

Background

Increasing awareness of the environmental and public health impacts of expanding and intensifying animal-based food and farming systems creates discord, with the reliance of much of the world's population on animals for livelihoods and essential nutrition. Increasing the efficiency of food production through improved animal health has been identified as a step towards minimising these negative effects without compromising global food security. The Global Burden of Animal Diseases (GBADs) programme aims to provide data and analytical methods to support positive change in animal health across all livestock and aquaculture animal populations.

Methods

In this study, we present a metric that begins the process of disease burden estimation by converting the physical consequences of disease on animal performance to farm-level costs of disease, and calculates a metric termed the Animal Health Loss Envelope (AHLE) via comparison between the status quo and a disease-free ideal. An example calculation of the AHLE metric for meat production from broiler chickens is provided.

Findings

The AHLE presents the direct financial costs of disease at farm-level for all causes by estimating losses and expenditure in a given farming system. The general specification of the model measures productivity change at farm-level and provides an upper bound on productivity change in the absence of disease. On its own, it gives an indication of the scale of total disease cost at farm-level.

Interpretation

The AHLE is an essential stepping stone within the GBADs programme because it connects the physical performance of animals in farming systems under different environmental and management conditions and different health states to farm economics. Moving forward, AHLE results will be an important step in calculating the wider monetary consequences of changes in animal health as part of the GBADs programme.

Funding

Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, the UK Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office, EU Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Programme.

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量化牲畜疾病成本:全球动物疾病负担的新指标
背景人们日益认识到,扩大和强化以动物为基础的食品和养殖系统会对环境和公共卫生造成影响,而世界上大部分人口的生计和基本营养都依赖于动物,这就造成了不和谐。通过改善动物健康来提高粮食生产效率,已被视为在不损害全球粮食安全的情况下最大限度地减少这些负面影响的一个步骤。全球动物疾病负担(GBADs)计划旨在提供数据和分析方法,以支持在所有畜牧业和水产养殖业动物种群中积极改变动物健康状况。方法在本研究中,我们提出了一种衡量标准,通过将疾病对动物表现的物理后果转换为农场层面的疾病成本,从而开始疾病负担的估算过程,并通过现状与无疾病理想状况之间的比较,计算出一种称为动物健康损失包络(AHLE)的衡量标准。本报告提供了一个肉鸡肉类生产的 AHLE 指标计算示例。研究结果 AHLE 通过估算给定养殖系统中的损失和支出,给出了所有原因导致的农场级疾病的直接经济成本。该模型的一般规格衡量了农场层面的生产率变化,并提供了无疾病情况下生产率变化的上限。AHLE 是 GBADs 计划的重要组成部分,因为它将养殖系统中动物在不同环境和管理条件下的体能表现以及不同的健康状况与农场经济学联系起来。展望未来,作为 GBADs 计划的一部分,AHLE 结果将成为计算动物健康变化的更广泛货币后果的重要步骤。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
28.40
自引率
2.30%
发文量
272
审稿时长
8 weeks
期刊介绍: The Lancet Planetary Health is a gold Open Access journal dedicated to investigating and addressing the multifaceted determinants of healthy human civilizations and their impact on natural systems. Positioned as a key player in sustainable development, the journal covers a broad, interdisciplinary scope, encompassing areas such as poverty, nutrition, gender equity, water and sanitation, energy, economic growth, industrialization, inequality, urbanization, human consumption and production, climate change, ocean health, land use, peace, and justice. With a commitment to publishing high-quality research, comment, and correspondence, it aims to be the leading journal for sustainable development in the face of unprecedented dangers and threats.
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