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Avian influenza vaccination in Egypt: Limitations of the current strategy

Vaccination of domestic poultry against avian influenza (AI) has been used on a large-scale in South East Asia since 2003 and in Egypt since 2006 to fight H5N1 highly-pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) epidemics. The decision to use mass vaccination against HPAI in Egypt was taken as an emergency mea...

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Autores principales: Peyre, Marisa, Samaha, Hamid, Makonnen, Yilma Jobre, Saad, Ahmed, Abd-Elnabi, Amira, Galal, Saber, Ettel, Toni, Dauphin, Gwenaelle, Lubroth, Juan, Roger, François, Domenech, Joseph
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Library Publishing Media 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2805840/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20076791
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author Peyre, Marisa
Samaha, Hamid
Makonnen, Yilma Jobre
Saad, Ahmed
Abd-Elnabi, Amira
Galal, Saber
Ettel, Toni
Dauphin, Gwenaelle
Lubroth, Juan
Roger, François
Domenech, Joseph
author_facet Peyre, Marisa
Samaha, Hamid
Makonnen, Yilma Jobre
Saad, Ahmed
Abd-Elnabi, Amira
Galal, Saber
Ettel, Toni
Dauphin, Gwenaelle
Lubroth, Juan
Roger, François
Domenech, Joseph
author_sort Peyre, Marisa
collection PubMed
description Vaccination of domestic poultry against avian influenza (AI) has been used on a large-scale in South East Asia since 2003 and in Egypt since 2006 to fight H5N1 highly-pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) epidemics. The decision to use mass vaccination against HPAI in Egypt was taken as an emergency measure based on positive impact of such control measures in Vietnam and the People's Republic of China. However, three years on, the impact on disease control of AI vaccination in Egypt has been very limited. Despite the continuous vaccination of poultry against HPAI, poultry outbreaks and human cases are reported regularly. A recent assessment study highlighted substantial weaknesses in the current immunisation programme and its lack of positive impact on the spread of infection or the maintenance of public health safety. The shortcomings of the vaccination strategy may be attributed in part to a lack of sufficient support in terms of funding and communication, the absence of an efficient monitoring system, and inadequate training of field technicians. The difficulties of blanket vaccinations in semi-commercial farms and household poultry sectors are well known, however, improvements in the industrial sector should be possible though better government controls and greater collaboration with the private sector. AI vaccination should be regarded as just one control tool within a broader disease control program integrating surveillance, outbreak investigation, disease management systems, and the rigorous implementation of bio-security measures. If incorrectly implemented, AI vaccination has a limited impact as a disease control measure. Moreover, without strict bio-security precautions undertaken during its application, farm visits to vaccinate poultry could facilitate the spread of the virus and therefore become a risk factor with important implications on the maintenance of the virus and potential risk for human exposure.
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spelling pubmed-28058402010-01-14 Avian influenza vaccination in Egypt: Limitations of the current strategy Peyre, Marisa Samaha, Hamid Makonnen, Yilma Jobre Saad, Ahmed Abd-Elnabi, Amira Galal, Saber Ettel, Toni Dauphin, Gwenaelle Lubroth, Juan Roger, François Domenech, Joseph J Mol Genet Med Minireview Vaccination of domestic poultry against avian influenza (AI) has been used on a large-scale in South East Asia since 2003 and in Egypt since 2006 to fight H5N1 highly-pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) epidemics. The decision to use mass vaccination against HPAI in Egypt was taken as an emergency measure based on positive impact of such control measures in Vietnam and the People's Republic of China. However, three years on, the impact on disease control of AI vaccination in Egypt has been very limited. Despite the continuous vaccination of poultry against HPAI, poultry outbreaks and human cases are reported regularly. A recent assessment study highlighted substantial weaknesses in the current immunisation programme and its lack of positive impact on the spread of infection or the maintenance of public health safety. The shortcomings of the vaccination strategy may be attributed in part to a lack of sufficient support in terms of funding and communication, the absence of an efficient monitoring system, and inadequate training of field technicians. The difficulties of blanket vaccinations in semi-commercial farms and household poultry sectors are well known, however, improvements in the industrial sector should be possible though better government controls and greater collaboration with the private sector. AI vaccination should be regarded as just one control tool within a broader disease control program integrating surveillance, outbreak investigation, disease management systems, and the rigorous implementation of bio-security measures. If incorrectly implemented, AI vaccination has a limited impact as a disease control measure. Moreover, without strict bio-security precautions undertaken during its application, farm visits to vaccinate poultry could facilitate the spread of the virus and therefore become a risk factor with important implications on the maintenance of the virus and potential risk for human exposure. Library Publishing Media 2009-12-09 /pmc/articles/PMC2805840/ /pubmed/20076791 Text en © The Authors http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.0/uk/ This is an open access article, published under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.0/uk/). This license permits non-commercial use, distribution and reproduction of the article, provided the original work is appropriately acknowledged with correct citation details.
spellingShingle Minireview
Peyre, Marisa
Samaha, Hamid
Makonnen, Yilma Jobre
Saad, Ahmed
Abd-Elnabi, Amira
Galal, Saber
Ettel, Toni
Dauphin, Gwenaelle
Lubroth, Juan
Roger, François
Domenech, Joseph
Avian influenza vaccination in Egypt: Limitations of the current strategy
title Avian influenza vaccination in Egypt: Limitations of the current strategy
title_full Avian influenza vaccination in Egypt: Limitations of the current strategy
title_fullStr Avian influenza vaccination in Egypt: Limitations of the current strategy
title_full_unstemmed Avian influenza vaccination in Egypt: Limitations of the current strategy
title_short Avian influenza vaccination in Egypt: Limitations of the current strategy
title_sort avian influenza vaccination in egypt: limitations of the current strategy
topic Minireview
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2805840/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20076791
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