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The Profiles Database & Decision Support Tool for Prioritisation of Animal Health and Welfare Issues for Government Intervention SZER Project Team Jane Gibbens, Andrew Frost, Simon Lawton, Francesca Day. UK VETERINARY SURVEILLANCE STRATEGY. HISTORY & PROGRESS.
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The Profiles Database & Decision Support Tool for Prioritisation of Animal Health and Welfare Issues for Government Intervention SZER Project Team Jane Gibbens, Andrew Frost, Simon Lawton, Francesca Day UK VETERINARY SURVEILLANCE STRATEGY
HISTORY & PROGRESS 2003: Veterinary Surveillance Strategy published • 10 year implementation plan • enhance veterinary surveillance • ensure early detection of important changes in animal health (BSE, FMD inquiries) • Key goal: ensure best allocation of finite resources for surveillance • Confirmed use of an objective, peer-reviewed evidence base ‘profiles’ 2004: Animal Health and Welfare Strategy published • Use sound science and evidence for decision making • Structured and transparent framework for prioritisation • ‘Profiles’ to be part of this framework 2005 – present: Wide consultation and exploration of options • Explored and defined evidence to be used in ‘Profiles’ • Explored potential structure & built a prototype in Excel • Validation of prototype (Defra Deputy Directors) • Launched Profiles Database (Nov 2007)
Profiles Database and Prioritisation Project Profiles Database A collection of profiles on specific animal diseases or welfare issues. Each profile is: • drafted by experts • peer reviewed • available to all on the web (once published) and will be used to automatically provide summary reports and Q&A’s as well once cleared for publication.
Profiles Database and Prioritisation Project Prioritisation Project A tool to use Profiles Database information to rank different diseases or issues for the 4 reasons for Government intervention listed in the AHW Strategy: • Protecting public health, • Promoting animal welfare, • Ensuring opportunities for international trade, and • Protecting the interests of the wider society and the economy
Prioritisation DST • ‘Risk & Epidemiology’ score - Equivalent to EU ‘Epidemiology’ and ‘Control Measures’ chapters • Likelihood of an unaffected holding becoming affected • Overall risk in epidemiological & societal terms • (Potential) rate of spread • Extent to which the keeper or government can control • Able to be populated and run rapidly • Visual summary – ranking of issues • By risk & impact (policy areas) • Level playing field
Profiles Database and Prioritisation Project Benefit: can prioritise finite resources in the context of government policy and the AHW strategy
Example Prioritisation Score • Overview of why each disease is important • Context of AHWS reasons for intervention • Avoids assumptions • No difference in relative importance between RFI’s as each RFI (and R&E) score out of 100
How the DST works • Up to 10 criteria defined for each RFI • Each has a score • Each has a relative weight • Overall score = sum of contribution from each criterion Example: Wider Society criterion with weight 10 (Detailed guidance defines each category) The greater the weighting, the more likely that a change in that criterion will change the disease’s relative ranking
Public Health Impact AHWS: “To protect the health of the public” • Summary score describes • How bad human disease is/might be 44% • Human attributable risk or exposure + extent GB based 38% • Uncertainty 13% • Costs of human disease 5%
Animal Welfare • AHWS: “Protect & promote the welfare of animals • Summary score describes • Number of individual animals affected 30% • Welfare impact: Five Freedoms + Duration 53% • Welfare impact of control measures 11% • Extent of excess suffering (disease/controls) 6%
Wider Society AHWS: Protect interests of wider economy, environment & society • Summary score describes • Risk of unexpected government costs 29% • Wider community social & economic impact 29% • Environmental impact 29% • Producer economic impact 14%
International Trade • AHWS: Ensure sustainable opportunities for (commercial) trade • Summary score describes • Government effort 43% • Legal risk 30% • (Potential) extent of impact on sector 26%
Risk & Epidemiology • Overall risk in epidemiological & societal terms • Likelihood of an unaffected holding becoming affected • (Potential) rate of spread • Extent to which the keeper or government can control
Future Developments • ‘What if?’ scenarios • Introduce effective vaccine? • Stop all intervention? • Improve surveillance? • Cross-cutting issues • Resource allocation for population databases • Animal identification • Scanning surveillance • Use similar approach for non-infectious issues • Intoxications • Lameness in dairy cows