A framework for quantifying the multisectoral burden of animal disease to support decision making.

IF 2.9 2区 农林科学 Q1 VETERINARY SCIENCES Frontiers in Veterinary Science Pub Date : 2025-01-23 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.3389/fvets.2025.1476505
Sara Lysholm, Gemma L Chaters, Carlotta Di Bari, Ellen C Hughes, Ben Huntington, Jonathan Rushton, Lian Thomas
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Abstract

Animal diseases have wide-ranging impacts in multiple societal arenas, including agriculture, public health and the environment. These diseases cause significant economic losses for farmers, disrupt food security and present zoonotic risks to human populations. Additionally, they contribute to antimicrobial resistance and a range of environmental issues such as greenhouse gas emissions. The societal and ecological costs of livestock diseases are frequently underrepresented or unaddressed in policy decisions and resource allocations. Social cost-benefit analysis (SCBA) offers a comprehensive framework to evaluate the broad impacts of animal diseases across different sectors. This approach aligns with the One Health concept, which seeks to integrate and optimize the health of humans, animals and the environment. Traditional economic evaluations often focus narrowly on profit maximization within the livestock sector, neglecting wider externalities such as public health and environmental impacts. In contrast, SCBA takes a multi-sectoral whole-system view, considering multiple factors to guide public and private sector investments toward maximizing societal benefits. This paper discusses three separate sector specific (Animal health, Human health, Environmental health) methodologies for quantifying the burden of animal diseases. It then discusses how these estimates can be combined to generate multisectoral estimates of the impacts of animal diseases on human societies and the environment using monetary values. Finally this paper explores how this framework can support the evaluation of interventions from a One Health perspective though SCBA. This integrated assessment framework supports informed decision-making and resource allocation, ultimately contributing to improved public health outcomes, enhanced animal welfare, and greater environmental sustainability.

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一个量化动物疾病多部门负担以支持决策的框架。
动物疾病在包括农业、公共卫生和环境在内的多个社会领域产生广泛影响。这些疾病给农民造成重大经济损失,破坏粮食安全,并给人类带来人畜共患风险。此外,它们还会导致抗菌素耐药性和温室气体排放等一系列环境问题。在政策决定和资源分配中,牲畜疾病的社会和生态代价往往被低估或未得到处理。社会成本效益分析(SCBA)为评估动物疾病在不同部门的广泛影响提供了一个全面的框架。这种方法与“一个健康”的概念相一致,该概念旨在整合和优化人类、动物和环境的健康。传统的经济评价往往狭隘地关注畜牧部门的利润最大化,而忽视了诸如公共卫生和环境影响等更广泛的外部因素。相比之下,SCBA采用多部门全系统的观点,考虑多种因素来指导公共和私营部门的投资,以实现社会效益最大化。本文讨论了量化动物疾病负担的三个独立的具体部门(动物卫生、人类卫生、环境卫生)方法。然后讨论如何将这些估计结合起来,利用货币价值对动物疾病对人类社会和环境的影响进行多部门估计。最后,本文探讨了该框架如何通过SCBA从一个健康的角度支持干预措施的评估。这一综合评估框架支持知情决策和资源分配,最终有助于改善公共卫生成果、提高动物福利和提高环境可持续性。
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来源期刊
Frontiers in Veterinary Science
Frontiers in Veterinary Science Veterinary-General Veterinary
CiteScore
4.80
自引率
9.40%
发文量
1870
审稿时长
14 weeks
期刊介绍: Frontiers in Veterinary Science is a global, peer-reviewed, Open Access journal that bridges animal and human health, brings a comparative approach to medical and surgical challenges, and advances innovative biotechnology and therapy. Veterinary research today is interdisciplinary, collaborative, and socially relevant, transforming how we understand and investigate animal health and disease. Fundamental research in emerging infectious diseases, predictive genomics, stem cell therapy, and translational modelling is grounded within the integrative social context of public and environmental health, wildlife conservation, novel biomarkers, societal well-being, and cutting-edge clinical practice and specialization. Frontiers in Veterinary Science brings a 21st-century approach—networked, collaborative, and Open Access—to communicate this progress and innovation to both the specialist and to the wider audience of readers in the field. Frontiers in Veterinary Science publishes articles on outstanding discoveries across a wide spectrum of translational, foundational, and clinical research. The journal''s mission is to bring all relevant veterinary sciences together on a single platform with the goal of improving animal and human health.
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