Researchers in Nepal confirm first case of TB in a rhino

Researchers in Nepal confirm first case of TB in a rhino

Researchers in Nepal confirm first case of TB in a rhino

RhinoResearchers at a wildlife conservation preserve in Nepal’s Chitwan National Park, have announced the first confirmed case of tuberculosis (TB) in a young female Asian One-horned rhino. This discovery is the first infectious disease discovered in the rhino population and a crucial step in the fight for rhino conservation.

The discovery has been published in a paper in Emerging Infectious Disease and is the result of research that began in 2012. The research called on experts and organizations that included the Veterinary Initiative for Endangered Wildlife (VIEW), the National Trust for Nature Conservation (NTNC).

Although poaching has been eliminated altogether since 2013, Chitwan National Park still saw 31 rhino deaths due to unknown circumstances over the past five years. Until recently, the inability to pinpoint the cause of these deaths was due to a lack of having proper systems in place to investigate the culprit.

Researchers discovered that the organism responsible for causing TB in the rhino is part of the Mycobacterium Tuberculosis Complex (MTBC) group. It is a close relative of organisms that cause TB in humans and cattle. They also noted that in 2014, the World Health Organization reported 9.6 million new TB cases each year in the world’s human population.

Deborah McCauley, founder and executive director of VIEW, told FoxNews.coml that the discovery of TB in rhinos will fuel debate about how to best serve the human and animal populations that could potentially be affected. In the case of the rhinos, poaching and habitat encroachment are often at the top of the intervention lists, but disease, the third issue, has the potential to be the greatest threat, she said.

“We have suspected for several years now that disease was the missing piece to the conservation puzzle,” explained McCauley, via email. “Now that we have firm evidence of TB, we can help the parks to understand the risk of TB and other diseases threatening precious, endangered species in order to help prevent further spread.”

This article originally appeared on the Fox news website on 30th march, 2016 authored by Grace Williams. available at: http://www.foxnews.com/science/2016/03/30/researchers-in-nepal-confirm-first-case-tb-in-rhino.html

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Anthropological musings on animal-human interactions and zoonotic disease

Anthropological musings on animal-human interactions and zoonotic disease

Anthropological musings on animal-human interactions and zoonotic disease

Fruit bat in Ghana. Image: Kofi Amponsah Mensah

Fruit bat in Ghana. Image: Kofi Amponsah Mensah

I was really excited when, a few years ago now, an opportunity arose for me to work on an interdisciplinary project looking at bats and zoonotic disease(diseases that go from animal to humans).  The truth was that I was more excited about the bats than the zoonotic disease stuff.

I’ve always loved bats for their soft, velvet touch, tiny faces full of expression and translucent wings. I also love their mystique and their anthropological symbolism.

Anthropologically, bats are anomalous and liminal animals. They are not easy to categorise: they look like mice but fly like birds; they are social but occupy the night. I had one of the best times in my anthropological career when I was invited to spend a night catching and tagging bats in Ghana.

Working with an interdisciplinary team, I came to learn much more of the many diseases harboured by bats (perhaps I will never again have the opportunity to go bat catching and to handle bats with the same naked enthusiasm). In the social science research on bats and zoonotic diseases (as I did actually have to do some anthropology and wasn’t able to convert to a full-time bat catcher), we focused on bat-human interactions and the policy implications thereof.

Disease spillover

The interactions between humans, domestic animals and wildlife are, in my view, the critical nexus where the scope for disease spillover occurs and, potentially, where a solution might lie. In my conceptualisation of animal-human interactions I focused on immediate, physical interactions – moments when humans and bats came together (men hunting bushmeat; kids playing with bats; families living in close proximity with bats), and in times and spaces where humans came into contact with bats’ bodily fluids or faeces (cleaning bat droppings off the car, eating fruit previously bitten by a bat).

Cast forward a few years, and I’m lucky enough to be involved in another interdisciplinary zoonotic disease project. This time it’s in Tanzania and I am focusing on cattle and pastoralists.

Now cows aren’t bats. And I can’t say that I have always loved cows. But, they are beautiful and regal (and, in Tanzania, a little bit scary).

Masaai woman milking. Image: Tiziana Lembo

Maasai woman milking. Image: Tiziana Lembo

And like bats, cows have important anthropological significance: in Southern Africa, where I grew up, cows are used for bridewealth, for establishing and solidifying social relationships, for determining lineages and for livelihoods. Similarly in Tanzania, where Maasai cattle are critical for establishing marriage relations, they bring children into lineages and have religious significance.

Working in Tanzania, and thinking about zoonotic disease, has made me realise just how complex animal-human interactions can be. I have come to realise that my focus – my own inbuilt bias – emphasised live human beings interacting with either live or dead animals, or with the bodily products of those animals, in a kind of one-to-one relationship. In my head, all these people were villagers or ordinary people going about their normal lives (my anthropological bias coming to the fore). For me, for a zoonotic disease to occur, a human had to interact with an animal that was sick or with the bodily fluids of that animal.

Rethinking animal-human interactions

But attending a workshop in Tanzania, in which vets, geographers, epidemiologists, modellers and more came together to discuss zoonotic diseases forced me to reconceptualise human-animal interaction in relation to zoonoses. It led me to start thinking about the many different ways in which animals can get sick and how human behaviours – often unseen and apparently unconnected – can affect animals’ states of health and the potential for human infection.

I came to realise that I hadn’t really considered how chains of interactions could occur between humans and animals, and nor had I considered the ways in which human-animal interactions could involve a microbial dimension or, if you will, microbial-animal–human interactions.

My work with others on fruit bats had already alerted me to the ways in which in Bangladesh, Australia and elsewhere bats roosting or eating fruit above domestic animals (horses in Australia, pigs in Bangladesh) can cause illness in these animals which can, in turn, infect humans. In some instances, perhaps exemplified in peri-urban environments (i.e. those at the interface between town and country) where wild and domestic animals are often in close proximity, people may not always be aware of the animal-to-animal-to-human interactions that are occurring.

Exactly which animals are interacting with other animals also affects the disease dynamics and which pathogens are involved. For example, fruit bats carry Henipaviruses which can be transmitted to pigs, horses (and humans) but other bats do not; similarly, foot and mouth disease affects ruminant wildlife and livestock, but not carnivores. Brucellosis affects many different animals – buffalo, cattle, pigs, sheep – and there are many different species of Brucella, with goats being associated with the most pathogenic of these species.

Movement and social networks

Cattle market in Tanzania. Image: Mary Ryan

Cattle market in Tanzania. Image: Mary Ryan

Movement and transportation offer further scope for understanding interactions and affect the possibility of infection. Transporting animals (sick and healthy) is significant as it can allow diseases to ‘jump’ across time and space, and markets play a key role. Here the length of time the animals are together is significant: for bovine tuberculosis short contacts at markets are not important, but foot and mouth is highly contagious even over brief contact periods.

The effect of movement is also influenced by the social networks of the livestock owners, both in terms of who these owners come into contact with and in terms of who they exchange animals with. And some livestock owners may act as ‘super spreaders’ by having a large number of networks and frequent interactions with many different people.

Thus, indirect human-to-human interactions completely removed from the animals themselves can shape how human-animal interactions take place.

The microbial dimension

Another dimension, although surely not the last, occurs at the level of microbial-animal-human ‘interactions’ and food-borne zoonotic diseases such as non-typhodial Salmonella and Campylobacter. Here, abattoirs, slaughter practices and cooking habits are particularly relevant as these diarrhoea-causing bacteria live on the skin and in the guts of animals.

Factors such as how an animal is slaughtered come into play: does, for example, raw meat come into direct contact with skin or faeces when a knife penetrates the intestines? But these bacteria could equally well live independently of animals – on knives, cutting surfaces, in the vehicles used to transport meat, on human hands – and can in this way infect both humans and animals. So microbial-human ‘interactions’ have a role to play too in considering zoonotic disease infection.

Now microscopic bugs are not cute, aren’t regal and don’t have an important symbolic role in anthropological literature. But isn’t it fascinating how many different kinds of interactions shape whether or not zoonotic disease infection occurs?

Having to think well beyond immediate face-to-face, physical interactions between humans and animals opens new horizons on how we conceptualise Livestock, Livelihoods and Health and in terms of how we respond to zoonotic diseases. Which reminds me: my role in this interdisciplinary project is to focus on policy understandings of zoonotic disease. I wonder what conceptualisations of animal-human interaction underlie current zoonoses-relevant policies in Tanzania?

Dr Linda Waldman is a Research Fellow at the STEPS Centre (Institute of Development Studies/University of Sussex).

Article originally appeared on the Livestock, livelihood and Health website on 30th March, 2016 authored by Dr Linda Waldman. Available at: http://livestocklivelihoodsandhealth.org/blog/musings/

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One Health strives to unite human, animal medical care

One Health strives to unite human, animal medical care

One Health strives to unite human, animal medical care

This past December, a team of professionals from different scientific fields, led by coauthors from NC State, won a competition to have their new case study published in the Association of American Veterinary Medical College journal last Friday. 

The competition, as a part of the AAVMC One Health initiative, brings attention to connections between the health of humans, animals, and the environment.

“The One Health initiative is a program that understands the connections between animal, human and environmental health. So it seeks to promote collaborations between those disciplines,” said Erika Rost, a co-lead author of the case study. 

Rost, along with co-lead author Erin Brewer, are members of the NC State Clinical Veterinary Pharmacy Residency. Other members of the team come from NC State, UNC-Chapel Hill, the UNC Eshelman School of Pharmacy and the Banfield Pet Hospital in Augusta, Georgia. 

“When you think about it, human medicine typically starts with animals,” Brewer said. “When we do drug trials, they all start with animals — looking for safety, toxicity, finding appropriate doses, whether it’s absorbed. So it’s definitely all related. There’s no reason why you can’t benefit from all of that information for all species.”  

The case study, titled “A Veteran and His Dog,” highlights issues that can cause common symptoms in both humans and animals. 

“The case is about a man named Robert, and he is a veteran and has PTSD,” Rost said. “So he has a service dog, Siri, for PTSD.”

The case study is directed toward professional students who receive medical records for both Robert and Siri. They watch videos of Robert speaking with a doctor and a veterinarian about his and Siri’s health respectively. 

When similar symptoms arise, students must come up with a diagnosis and a plan to treat the two companions. In addition, the complexities of their health are interloped with various financial and social issues that could also be playing a role. 

“The reason this is important for students is, back in the 80s, the World Health Organization found that students who participated in inter-professional studies such as this one were more likely to collaborate later when they were out in practice,” Rost said.  

Brewer agreed, saying, “Everybody has their own specialty. We spend four years learning specifically about drugs, so we might have something to offer another profession who only gets a couple of hours of that kind of instruction. And the same with anybody’s specialty, you have something to bring to the table that everyone can benefit from.” 

Brewer encouraged others to participate in the competition in the future. 

“If anyone’s interested in it, it’s a great opportunity, a great experience, to learn from other professions and to come up with something really unique,” Brewer said.

This post originally appeared on the Technician website on 9th February, 2016 authored by Adam Davis. Available at: http://www.technicianonline.com/news/article_535faa4a-ceed-11e5-b92a-b342f6fbef10.html

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The Philippines Rabies vaccination campaign: a One Health success story

The Philippines Rabies vaccination campaign: a One Health success story

The Philippines Rabies vaccination campaign: a One Health success story

Philipines Rabies vaccinationRabies still causes the death of tens of thousands of people every year. Knowing that dog bites are responsible for more than 95% of all human rabies cases, the eradication of canine rabies is the only way to end the disease’s animal-human transmission cycle. It is estimated that vaccinating 70% of dogs in zones where rabies is present can dramatically reduce human cases.

The World Organisation for Animal Health Director-General, Dr Monique Eloit, explains the work of the OIE carried out regarding the One Health concept, with a particular focus on the success story of the Philippines Rabies vaccination campaign, where 1,701,150 doses of rabies vaccines have been delivered between January and February 2016. These recent deliveries raise the number of doses purchased by a beneficiary country in collaboration with WHO through the OIE rabies vaccine bank to almost 8 million.

The OIE thanks the WHO Pandemics and Epidemics Diseases Department for authorizing the use of the interview’s footage recorded in December 2015.

?

View the recording below

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One Health Case Studies Now Online

One Health Case Studies Now Online

One Health Case Studies Now Online

Veterinary, medical, nursing and public health students can learn from an AAVMC-led initiative.

The concept of One Health is taught at institutions such as Midwestern University, which operates a veterinary college in Glendale, Ariz.

The concept of One Health is taught at institutions such as Midwestern University, which operates a veterinary college in Glendale, Ariz. Tom Boggan/Midwestern University

he Association of American Veterinary Medical Colleges has teamed up with another organization to publish 15 case studies on One Health topics.

The material, produced by researchers and available here, may be used by instructors in fields such as veterinary medicine, human medicine and public health.

One Health is a concept that closely links the health of animals, people and the environment.

“This is one of our most promising initiatives in the area of One Health,” said AAVMC’s executive director, Andrew T. Maccabe, DVM, MPH, JD. “What’s unique about this program is it unites different health professions on a common platform to begin educating new generations of health professionals about the One Health approach.”

The case studies range from “A Veteran and His Dog,” which focuses on carbon monoxide poisoning, to “Pet Ownership,” which addresses the health benefits of human-animal interaction.

Each online report, selected from among 34 proposals, targets a potential audience and offers student and facilitator materials. “Pet Ownership,” for example, is recommended for veterinary, veterinary technician, medical, nursing and public health students.

Managing the project with AAVMC were the Association for Prevention, Teaching and Research and the Washington, D.C., organization’s Healthy People Curriculum Task Force.

The case studies will be presented in early March at AAVMC’s annual conference. Each lead author will be named a One Health Scholar.

Besides “A Veteran and His Dog” and “Pet Ownership,” the other case studies are:

  • “Bordetella Infections in Cystic Fibrosis Patients”
  • “Staphylococcus pseudintermedius: Look What the Dog Dragged In?”
  • “Care of Immunocompromised Individuals: The Role of Companion Animals in Mental Health”
  • “Lead Poisoning”
  • “Q Fever in the Suburbs: Zoonotic Disease Outbreak Tabletop Training Exercise”
    “Brucella suis: A Re-emerging Pathogen at the Human, Livestock, and Wildlife Interface”
  • “Of Dogs and Men: Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus”
  • “Human-Animal Interaction”
  • “Chagas Disease: Connections Between Humans, Animals and the Ecosystem”
  • “More Than Just Companions: The Role of Animal Assisted Therapy in Prevention, Health and Wellness”
  • “Animals, Humans and the Environment in the Epidemiology of Chikungunyavirus”
  • “When Nature Strikes! An Unusual Infection in a Child from New Orleans”
  • “The Pathomechanics of Degenerative Joint Disease: A One Health Comparative Case Study Approach”

This post originally appeared on the Veterinary Practice website on 23rd February, 2016, authored by Veterinary Practice News editors. Available at: http://www.veterinarypracticenews.com/one-health-case-studies-now-online/

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