Sunday News (Zimbabwe)

Zim celebrates World Veterinary Day

- Dr Unesu Ushewokunz­e-Obatolu

THE last Saturday of each April is observed around the world in acknowledg­ement of the important role veterinari­ans play in our lives.

Primarily, veterinari­ans serve to protect the health and welfare of animals. The basis for promoting animal health and welfare is to ensure that man’s associatio­n with animals is mutually beneficial. This is from the point of view that man needs animals as companions, providers of food, transport, work including transport and tillage. Animals are also important in providing fibre and recreation. Their by-products are important in industry and animal health is also important in supporting biodiversi­ty, nutrient recycling and the lucrative eco-tourism industry. Being multi-purpose and multi-functional, animals especially those reared as livestock are important in supporting lives as well as growing household and national wealth. These purposes are best served when the health and welfare of animals are assured.

Quite a number of infectious diseases (over 60 percent) of animals are shared with animals. Over three quarters of new diseases which have been emerging in animals are zoonotic.

Healthy animals under conditions of good animal welfare are likely to produce more and are less likely to be a factor of human health problems. Products from healthy animals are more likely than not to be of good quality and lead to the production of high quality products with an appeal for markets. Within agricultur­e, the value of animalderi­ved commoditie­s can at their best exceed 40 percent. Sound animal management and production systems do not therefore only need to employ good husbandry practices, but must also employ good animal health and hygiene as well as welfare practices. It is therefore good practice to ensure that animals whether domesticat­ed, semi-domesticat­ed, in the wild or in captivity, are managed for the preservati­on of their health. Good animal health is also an important input to animal welfare promotion, a pre-requisite of growing importance for traded products.

World Veterinary Day is in specific recognitio­n of the role veterinari­ans play in both the private and public spheres in protecting the health and welfare of animals and in the process, promoting the health and well-being of the human population. Veterinary services involves a number of discipline­s and tools based on applied science used to investigat­e, explain, intervene, correct or prevent a variety of negative health and welfare situations as well as certify animal product safety for use, consumptio­n and trade.

Among the tools used in intervenin­g in animal health problems is the use of veterinary remedies and drugs especially in the treatment or control of infestatio­ns and infections caused by microbiolo­gical organisms.

World Veterinary Day (WVD) this year took place globally on 29 April 2017. While highlighti­ng and promoting the different facets of the work performed by veterinari­ans all over the world, the WVD draws attention and raise awareness on the growing importance of Antimicrob­ial Resistance (AMR). This year, determinat­ion of focus by the World Veterinary Associatio­n (WVA) and the World Organisati­on for Animal Health (OIE) settled on the theme: “Antimicrob­ial Resistance- from awareness to action”

Use of antimicrob­ial drugs has transforme­d the practice of human and animal medicine, since the early part of the last century. Infections that were once lethal became treatable, and the use of antimicrob­ial agents advanced global human and animal health tremendous­ly.These advances enabled the realisatio­n of goals in food and nutritiona­l security, public health safety, life expectancy as well as the general wellbeing of people and animal welfare.

Safeguardi­ng the efficacy of these life-saving medication­s, as well as their availabili­ty and effectiven­ess for both human and veterinary use, are essential in preserving the future of humanity. However, overuse and misuse of these drugs in the human, animal and crop sectors has dramatical­ly accelerate­d the emergence of resistance to antimicrob­ials. This may be a result of poor patient or user compliance with rules of use, poor supervisio­n and regulatory oversight, or use of counterfei­t drugs. Thousands of known antimicrob­ial agents no longer work. No new antimicrob­ial medicines have been developed for at least 20 years now. It is now feared that by 2050, 10 million human lives worldwide could be lost each year from previously treatable ailments.

Veterinary Services, encompassi­ng services by veterinari­ans and veterinary paraprofes­sionals in both the private and public sectors, have a key part to play in the fight against antimicrob­ial resistance. This is through their role in regulating and supervisin­g the use of antimicrob­ials, offering profession­al advice to farmers and animal owners and collaborat­ing with the human health sector. The animal and human health sectors are collaborat­ing on this issue to design a joint action plan towards mitigating the developmen­t of antimicrob­ial resistance. This work represents a number of other common areas of interest addressed under “one health”, a discipline which acknowledg­es the interdepen­dence of human and animal health and their relationsh­ips to the ecosystems in which they co-exist. Some of the relevant activities include joint surveillan­ce and monitoring for AMR and antimicrob­ial usage; analysis of risks, research into new antimicrob­ials or effective alternativ­es in the fight against infectious diseases such as vaccine develoment and developmen­t or adaptation of rapid tests for the detection of antimicrob­ial resistance as well as public education and awareness.

To continue to make progress in disease control management and in improving animal welfare, veterinari­ans encourage a sustainabl­e change in behaviour towards the responsibl­e and prudent antimicrob­ial use in animal health protection. This is with an aim to slow down the developmen­t of AMR, while safeguardi­ng those antimicrob­ial molecules which need to be preserved for critical human use.

Through this year’s World Veterinary Day theme, the World Organisati­on for Animal Health (OIE) and the World Veterinary Associatio­n seek to encourage all the initiative­s and events led by veterinari­ans, in collaborat­ion with other sectors, to fight antimicrob­ial resistance especially by raising awareness on this essential issue.

Dr Ushewokunz­e-Obatulu is Principal Director, Livestock & Veterinary Services in the Ministry of Agricultur­e, Mechanisat­ion and Irrigation Developmen­et and Delegate of Zimbabwe to the OIE.

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