Latest news with #pestedespetitsruminants


Hans India
24-05-2025
- Health
- Hans India
Infectious animal diseases migrating to new species, about half raise threat to humans: Report
Infectious animal diseases are affecting new areas and species, with half (47 per cent) having zoonotic -- or animal-to-human – potential, raising the risk of newer pandemics, according to a global report. The new annual assessment, published by the World Organisation for Animal Health (WOAH), provides the first comprehensive review of animal disease trends, risks, and challenges, from the uptake and availability of vaccines to the use of antibiotics in animals. It showed that the reported number of avian influenza outbreaks in mammals more than doubled last year compared to 2023 with 1,022 outbreaks across 55 countries compared to 459 outbreaks in 2023. While its risk to humans remains low, the more mammalian species such as cattle, cats, or dogs are infected, the greater the possibility of the virus adapting to mammal-to-mammal, and potentially human, transmission, the authors said. 'The spread, prevalence, and impact of infectious animal diseases are changing, bringing new challenges for agriculture and food security, human health and development, and natural ecosystems,' said Dr. Emmanuelle Soubeyran, Director General of WOAH. The report also mentioned the increasing distribution and intensity of diseases such as African Swine Fever (ASF), avian influenza, foot and mouth disease (FMD), and peste des petits ruminants (PPR). It warned that their proliferation was destabilising agrifood systems, which can undermine global food security and biodiversity, in addition to human health. The report cited climate change and increased trade as factors influencing the spread and prevalence of animal diseases, majorly recorded across several regions in 2024 and early 2025. Although many are preventable through a combination of vaccination, improved hygiene, and biosecurity measures, the report noted that access to animal vaccines remains uneven around the world. 'Alongside other measures, vaccination remains one of the most powerful disease prevention tools available, saving countless lives, preventing economic losses, and reducing the need for antimicrobial treatments,' Soubeyran added. The report also emphasised the importance of disease prevention for reducing the need for antibiotic treatment and limiting the development of drug-resistant diseases.


The Hindu
29-04-2025
- Health
- The Hindu
Vaccination drive against PPR for 4.5 lakh goats in Vellore, nearby districts
A month-long free vaccination drive against peste des petits ruminants (PPR) disease for more than 4.5 lakh goats and sheep by veterinary teams to goat sheds in Vellore, Ranipet, Tirupattur and Tiruvannamalai commenced on Tuesday. In her order, Collector said that the vaccination drive was aimed to prevent any outbreak of the disease due to prevailing extreme heat in the district. Under the Livestock Health and Disease Control Scheme (LHDCP) 2025-26, the Department of Animal Husbandry, Dairying and Fisheries will cover around 1.4 lakh goats and sheep in Vellore alone as part of the drive. 'The second phase of the drive will focus on newborns as they are not resistant to the virus. Goats and sheep that are four-month-old and above are eligible for the vaccine, which is done annually. The drive will be completed on May 28,' said Dr. G. Anbuvan, Assistant Director (AD), Department of Animal Husbandry (Vellore). As per norms under the National Digital Livestock Mission Blueprint, vaccinated animals will be equipped with bar-coded ear tags with vaccination details. The Collector urged dairy farmers to take part in the drive. Among districts, Tiruvannamalai has the highest number of over 1.5 lakh goats, followed by Ranipet (1.5 lakh) and Vellore (1.3 lakh). As part of the drive, medical teams will visit beneficiaries to vaccinate animals in the sheds every day. Each team comprises a doctor, livestock inspector and a attendent. Officials said that the PPR disease was caused by a highly virulent strain of viruses transmitted through urine, tears and manure of infected animals. Affected sheep will develop lesions on the mouth, tongue and gums. Goats will have watery eyes, nose and mouth along with sneezing and cough. Animals will also be prone to respiratory problems, high body temperature. It will result in low productivity.


BBC News
27-01-2025
- Health
- BBC News
Why Bill Gates is being dragged into a row over vaccinating cows in Kenya
An ambitious initiative to vaccinate all livestock in Kenya is due to kick off this week amid fierce resistance from farmers that is being driven by misleading claims about the will cost farmers nothing to get their animals vaccinated as the government says it is footing the Robert Nkukuu, who keeps cattle in the Mai Mahiu area of Nakuru county - some 50km (30 miles) north-west of the capital, Nairobi, explained how it had become a toxic issue since President William Ruto announced the plan last November."If the community here learns you are pro-vaccination they will slay you just now. So stop talking about it, we don't want it," he told the government's aim is to vaccinate at least 22 million cattle and 50 million goats and sheep over three only 10% of the national herd get the necessary vaccinations and the authorities say they want to raise that rate to 85% to make Kenya's livestock products eligible for president, who is a farm owner and has several big herds himself, has said the vaccines are vital for expanding the sector by controlling foot-and-mouth disease in cattle and peste des petits ruminants (PPR) - also known as sheep and goat some of those who oppose the programme believe Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates is funding it, fuelled by people sharing videos of interviews featuring him talking about vaccinating cows to control methane emissions. Methane expelled by livestock belching and farting contributes about 15% of global emissions each year, UN estimates show. It is the most common greenhouse gas after carbon dioxide (CO2).Jonathan Mueke, a senior official in Kenya's agriculture ministry, has denied that Gates is involved in the livestock vaccination programme - adding that neither the US billionaire and philanthropist nor other foreign sources have provided this has not stopped the conspiracy theories being circulated on social media, often by high-profile Karuga, a former journalist and now an influential farmer, posted on X that he would resist the jabs, saying no-one will vaccinate his livestock just "because Bill Gates said so".Ledama Olekina, an opposition senator and prominent Maasai pastoralist, wrote on X: "There [are] millions of cows in Europe and America and none of them are being vaccinated for farting … mine will not be vaccinated."Gates has previously invested in projects to reduce methane emissions from cattle and is funding a US-based company looking to develop a vaccine, as are other US Prof Ermias Kebreab from the University of California, Davis in the US, who has researched how to reduce methane emissions from livestock, told the BBC there was currently no livestock vaccine for reducing methane emissions in use."I wish we had one but that is still in development - and no-one has reached [the stage of] testing in animals yet," he such assurances have done little to quell misunderstanding about the motives of the vaccine distrust is being pushed by some opposition politicians, who have said the vaccines will alter the genetic make-up of livestock, potentially resulting in defective animals."Ruto is advancing a sinister foreign agenda. This plan is reckless and must be stopped," said Kalonzo Musyoka, an opposition leader, not long after the initiative was the BBC asked Musyoka about the specific claims that the vaccines could be harmful to the cattle, his spokesperson said the vaccination campaign was a "violation of the constitution".He added that it had been "shrouded in secrecy" and the government had not shared details about resources, implementation or technical details about the suggestion that livestock vaccines will genetically change animals is misleading, according to Prof Ermias."It is very similar to people getting vaccinated to fight against various diseases. There is no report that it causes deformities or alters DNA," the academic told the BBC. President Ruto has dismissed the views of those opposing the vaccinations as "simply misguided, unreasonable and possibly stupid"."All of us who have been vaccinated, has anyone stopped farting?" Ruto said as he dismissed the methane claims as "nonsense".Yet analysts say the spread of such conspiracy theories is down to poor communication by Ruto himself as well as low trust in his government following anti-tax protests last year and a series of corruption government has faced a huge backlash over tax increases brought in since Ruto became president in 2022 - making it very unpopular. Last June it was forced to withdraw a controversial finance bill that would have included more tax Shiundu, Kenya editor at fact-checking organisation AfricaCheck, says the government was now facing a "trust deficiency" in the way it communicated the livestock Ruto first announced it, details were scant - and it was not clear what the animals would be vaccinated is when tools that monitor social media posts on X show there was a clear spike in mentions of both Gates and cows by accounts with their location listed as furore grew into a matter of national debate, with cartoonists even pushing for cows' rights on social media with comical images captioned "my fart, my choice".The Kenya Veterinary Association (KVA) has called on the government to halt the vaccination exercise and conduct a public awareness campaign first."The politicisation of the vaccination exercise has adversely affected the entire campaign, thus distracting the public from the goal of controlling diseases," Dr Kelvin Osore, KVA chairperson, told the Dr Allan Azegele, the director of veterinary services at the agriculture ministry, said it could not be delayed given the recent severe outbreak of foot-and-mouth in western has forced several livestock markets to close this month - and the authorities have imposed strict quarantine measures in those places."We cannot wait… because it is more expensive to respond to outbreaks. We have to be proactive rather than reactive," Dr Azegele told the said foot-and-mouth had no specific treatment, making prevention through vaccination crucial. Agriculture Minister Mutahi Kagwe has sought to reassure everyone that the exercise will be voluntary and has pledged to engage all stakeholders to "cure misinformation" surrounding the government has also been reassuring the public that the vaccines are being produced some farmers are still vowing to resist the vaccination drive, citing possible foreign influence and mistrust of the Tiriki, a livestock farmer in Kajiado county, south of Nairobi, told the BBC that he would not allow his animals to be inoculated, citing safety fears."I suspect someone is trying to introduce a virus to our livestock so that the rich can start selling the cure to poor farmers who might not even afford it," he BBC did speak to one small-scale farmer from Makueni county, south-east of Nairobi, who welcomed the Ngemu Musau urged the government to make the whole process more transparent."I want assurance that my cattle will be OK after the vaccine," he told the BBC."There is a need for the government to conduct intensive public awareness campaigns." You may also be interested in: Vet recounts wild tales of working in KenyaKenya rolls out poison in bid to cull a million crowsHow a Kenyan farmer became a champion of climate change denialWhy farmers like William Ruto's big ambitionsKenyan president's humbling shows power of African youth Go to for more news from the African us on Twitter @BBCAfrica, on Facebook at BBC Africa or on Instagram at bbcafrica