Recommendations to Control Spread of African Swine Fever
EASTERN EUROPE - FAO regional office in Budapest organised a high-level meeting about the threat of African swine fever spread in Eastern Europe in early December 2012.African swine fever (ASF), a serious swine disease that has killed hundreds of thousands of pigs in the
Russian Federation and the Caucasus, is seriously threatening to spread further to Eastern Europe
and can cause severe losses to the whole European swine industry. In 2009-2012, overall losses due
to the disease in Russia reached over US$1 billion.
African swine fever is not a direct danger for
human health nor does it threaten other animal species as it only affects pigs and wild boar.
However, it can impact people's livelihoods, food security and nutrition. There is no vaccine or
treatment against this disease and almost all infected animals die after some days. Disease can be
prevented through good husbandry practices and controlled through stamping out of the affected
pigs and potentially affected pigs nearby. This requires compensation policies to ensure reporting
and ease the hardship on pig owners.
African swine fever originates in Africa, but was introduced into Georgia in 2007, from where it
quickly spread throughout the Caucasus and into the Russian Federation. The disease spreads mainly
through pork and pork products, where the virus can resist for long periods. If not prevented and
controlled, ASF will easily spread to Europe with devastating economic consequences and serious
trade restrictions to neighboring countries.
Chief Veterinary Officers and international experts came together in Budapest to discuss the
threatening situation and find a common strategy to fight the disease. The meeting, entitled 'Threat
of African Swine Fever spread in Eastern Europe: Urgent need for international collaboration', was
organized by the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO UN) under the aegis
of the FAO/OIE Global Framework for Progressive Control of Transboundary Animal Diseases (GFTADs).
The event took place at FAO Regional Office for Europe and Central Asia in Budapest on 4 and 5
December 2012.
A total of 35 participants attended the meeting, representing 14 state veterinary services,
international organizations such as the World Organisation for Animal Health (OIE), European
Commission (EC), United States Department of Agriculture (USDA), International Council for Game
and Wildlife Conservation (CIC),as well as international or EU/national reference laboratories and
research institutions from Spain, Russian Federation, Poland, Italy and France.
Following a number of expert presentations on the epidemiological situation in Eastern Europe,
representatives from participating countries presented their current situation, gaps and emergency
preparedness plans. FAO also presented the results of a comprehensive study on ASF epidemiological
and ecological features in the Russian Federation and the lessons that could be applied on disease
control in Eastern Europe and elsewhere.
Participants at the meeting discussed mechanisms to
foster regional cooperation of the veterinary services and relevant international organizations for
prevention and control of this devastating swine disease. They shared the urgency of regional
cooperation and also recommended to make the general public more aware about the risk of
transporting the disease through transport of pork products.
A set of recommendations for better
prevention and control of ASF was agreed by all participants.
Further ReadingYou can view the summary of this meeting and the recommendations by clicking here. |