Elton et al. One Health Outlook
(2021) 3:5
https://doi.org/10.1186/s42522-021-00037-8
One Health Outlook
RESEARCH
Open Access
Zoonotic disease preparedness in subSaharan African countries
Linzy Elton1* , Najmul Haider2, Richard Kock2, Margaret J. Thomason1, John Tembo3, Liã Bárbara Arruda1,
Francine Ntoumi4,5, Alimuddin Zumla1,6, Timothy D. McHugh1 and And the PANDORA-ID-NET consortium
Abstract
Background: The emergence of high consequence pathogens such as Ebola and SARS-CoV-2, along with the
continued burden of neglected diseases such as rabies, has highlighted the need for preparedness for emerging
and endemic infectious diseases of zoonotic origin in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) using a One Health approach. To
identify trends in SSA preparedness, the World Health Organization (WHO) Joint External Evaluation (JEE) reports
were analysed. JEEs are voluntary, collaborative processes to assess country’s capacities to prevent, detect and
rapidly respond to public health risks. This report aimed to analyse the JEE zoonotic disease preparedness data as a
whole and identify strengths and weaknesses.
Methods: JEE zoonotic disease preparedness scores for 44 SSA countries who had completed JEEs were analysed.
An overall zoonotic disease preparedness score was calculated as an average of the sum of all the SSA country
zoonotic disease preparedness scores and compared to the overall mean JEE score. Zoonotic disease preparedness
indicators were analysed and data were collated into regions to identify key areas of strength.
Results: The mean ‘Zoonotic disease’ preparedness score (2.35, range 1.00–4.00) was 7% higher compared to the
mean overall JEE preparedness score (2.19, range 1.55–3.30), putting ‘Zoonotic Diseases’ 5th out of 19 JEE sub-areas
for preparedness. The average scores for each ‘Zoonotic Disease’ category were 2.45 for ‘Surveillance Systems’, 2.76
for ‘Veterinary Workforce’ and 1.84 for ‘Response Mechanisms’. The Southern African region scored highest across
the ‘Zoonotic disease’ categories (2.87).
A multisectoral priority zoonotic pathogens list is in place for 43% of SSA countries and 70% reported undertaking
national surveillance on 1–5 zoonotic diseases. 70% of SSA countries reported having public health training courses
in place for veterinarians and 30% had veterinarians in all districts (reported as sufficient staffing). A multisectoral
action plan for zoonotic outbreaks was in place for 14% countries and 32% reported having an established interagency response team for zoonotic outbreaks. The zoonotic diseases that appeared most in reported country
priority lists were rabies and Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza (HPAI) (both 89%), anthrax (83%), and brucellosis
(78%).
(Continued on next page)
* Correspondence: linzy.elton@ucl.ac.uk; linzy.elton@gmail.com
1
Centre for Clinical Microbiology, Division of Infection & Immunity, University
College London, London, UK
Full list of author information is available at the end of the article
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Elton et al. One Health Outlook
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(Continued from previous page)
Conclusions: With ‘Zoonotic Diseases’ ranking 5th in the JEE sub-areas and a mean SSA score 7% greater than the
overall mean JEE score, zoonotic disease preparedness appears to have the attention of most SSA countries.
However, the considerable range suggests that some countries have more measures in place than others, which
may perhaps reflect the geography and types of pathogens that commonly occur. The category ‘Response
Mechanisms’ had the lowest mean score across SSA, suggesting that implementing a multisectoral action plan and
response team could provide the greatest gains.
Keywords: Zoonotic disease, Joint external evaluation, One health, Sub-Saharan Africa
Study highlights
‘Veterinary Workforce’ was the strongest ‘Zoonotic
Disease’ category across SSA
‘Response Mechanisms’ was the weakest category,
and improving communication between clinical,
veterinary and environmental sectors could improve
zoonotic disease responses
Southern Africa had the highest mean score for all
‘Zoonotic Disease’ categories, suggesting that other
countries could adapt their strengths to their own
situations
The 5 most-cited zoonoses on SSA priority pathogen lists are rabies, Highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI), anthrax, brucellosis and bovine
tuberculosis, all of which are ‘neglected’ diseases
Introduction
Many human infectious diseases have originated from
animals. It is thought that 60% of currently known human infectious diseases [1] and as much as 75% of emerging infectious diseases are of zoonotic origin, or the
result of a spill over event which then established itself
in humans [1, 2]. Whilst many high income countries
(HICs) have successfully reduced or eradicated zoonoses,
often utilizing expensive interventions, the heaviest burden of zoonotic diseases now often falls on low and
middle-income countries (LMICs), who historically have
the poorest healthcare infrastructure and rely most heavily on livestock economically [3]. This is especially important in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA), where reliance on
livestock and bush meat can be high [4]. The fact that,
in many of the regions affected by zoonotic diseases,
livestock play a vital role both as a cash reserve and
source of income in poor communities makes it not only
medically, but also economically, important to ensure
animals are kept healthy [4]. The environmental and social change our expanding population is causing is affecting the way infectious diseases spread across the
globe. The increase in air travel to and from highburden areas such as South America, Africa and Asia is
likely to increase the introduction of vector-borne
pathogens to new regions, whilst the abundance of
human-commensal species, such as rats, is increasing
alongside urbanisation and deforestation, raising the opportunity for human transmission of zoonoses [5].
As, by definition, zoonotic diseases are infectious diseases that are naturally transmitted from vertebrate animals to humans and vice versa [6], the need for a One
Health approach cannot be overstated. Limiting or eliminating the transfer of pathogens between animals, the
environment and humans, and therefore reducing the
risk of them becoming an emerging infectious disease is
of vital importance. The value of zoonotic pathogen surveillance is beginning to gain traction in Africa, although
it is often difficult to identify whether data are collected,
never mind what trends may exist [7–9]. The World
Health Organization (WHO) notes that the steps to
achieve a One Health approach should include: promoting the concept of a multisectoral approach and developing integrated control packages, raising the profile of
neglected zoonotic diseases, collecting surveillance data
to identify those at risk, and investing in the development of new tools, particularly diagnostics, to effectively
control zoonoses [4, 10].
Zoonotic disease spill over events (when zoonotic
pathogens are transmitted to humans) occur frequently
in Africa, including direct zoonotic events, from animals
to humans, such as Lassa fever across West Africa
(2016–2018) [11] and Monkeypox in West and Central
Africa [12], as well as secondary, human-to-human epidemiological cycles such as Ebola in West Africa (2013–
2016) and the Democratic Republic of Congo (2019) [13,
14]. There are also more localised, but common, outbreaks of diseases such as salmonellosis and Yellow
Fever [15]. Some, such as Rift Valley Fever, can occur locally, such as in South Africa [16] or be more widespread, such as across Eastern Africa, as well as the
Middle East [17].
As a first step in preventing emerging infectious disease outbreaks of animal origin in humans, it is important for SSA countries to know what level of support
systems are already in place. The scientific literature
mainly focuses on the research being done, rather than
the infrastructure that supports it, but reports from
Elton et al. One Health Outlook
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(2021) 3:5
global organisations such as the Africa Centre for disease Control (Africa CDC), US Centers for Disease Control (US CDC), WHO, World Organisation for Animal
Health (OIE) and the Food and Agriculture Organisation
(FAO) suggest that much more could be done to combat
zoonoses [4, 18–20]. The WHO reports that, due to
multiple factors such as poor funding, a lack of veterinary and clinical cooperation and disease misdiagnosis,
the real burden of zoonoses is often missed [4]. This creates a lack of reliable evidence for governments and policy makers to utilise when implementing legislation at
both local and national levels [21]. This WHO report
also suggests that control measures are often undertaken
in isolation, which is therefore likely to make them less
effective than when part of a suite of control measures
[4].
Strengthening country-specific preparedness for potential public health risks, including zoonotic disease,
has increasingly become the focus for governments and
health organisations. The 58th World Health Assembly
in 2005 resulted in the formation of the International
Health Regulations, which developed the Joint External
Evaluations (JEEs): voluntary, collaborative procedures
that assess a country’s capacity to ‘prevent, detect and
rapidly respond to public health risks’ [22]. The zoonotic
disease preparedness for countries is measured by the
presence of a ‘functional multisectoral, multidisciplinary
mechanisms, policies, systems and practices to minimize
the transmission of zoonotic diseases from animals to
human populations’ [23]. In March 2020, 86% (44/50) of
the SSA countries (according to WHO definition), had
completed a JEE [23, 24].
JEE reports cover prevention, detection, response and
IHR related hazards and points of entry areas, which are
classified into 19 sub-areas. ‘Zoonotic Disease’ is one of
these sub-areas and is divided into three categories.
Technical questions and indicators scores are applied to
evaluate the preparedness of a country to a specific zoonotic disease. The indicator scores range from 1 to 5, indicating if a country has respectively: no, limited,
developed, demonstrated or sustainable capacity to address a particular sub-area.
Whilst there are many areas of zoonotic disease to
focus on, it would be beneficial to step back and look at
the wider picture. A comparison of the zoonotic disease
facilities and infrastructure across SSA has yet to be
made, and using JEE’s provides a robust, standardised
set of indicators to detect stronger and weaker areas
across SSA. This provides an outline of how SSA is tackling zoonotic diseases, and how well zoonotic disease
preparedness is implemented compared to other public
health concerns, such as antimicrobial resistance. When
collated into African regions (West, Central, East and
Southern), these strengths can be further focussed and
adapted by countries who may be finding it more challenging. The data acquired from this study can inform
zoonotic disease policy in the future. This study aimed
to analyse the JEE data to understand zoonotic disease
preparedness across SSA countries.
Methods
The completed JEE reports from 44 SSA countries (as
described by the WHO regions), were accessed between
6th November 2019 and 22nd March 2020 and analysed
[25] and the sub-areas scores were compared [24]. The
analysis of these data is described in Elton et al. [24].
The ‘Zoonotic disease’ sub-area was compared to the
other sub-areas (such as immunization and antimicrobial
resistance preparedness) and a ranking table was compiled [24].
The percentage of countries in each score category
was determined, as well as the percentage of the countries that reported having zoonotic disease prevention
and control structures in position, which was identified
from the accompanying technical question written reports, as described in Table 1. In the first edition of the
JEE tool [26], there were three categories within ‘Zoonotic Disease’, whereas by 2018, the second edition [22]
had removed the category ‘Veterinary or animal health
workforce’. The majority (86%) of countries had completed JEEs before this change, thus have all three categories (Central African Republic, Republic of Congo,
Malawi, Gabon, Guinea Bissau, São Tomé and Príncipe
and Comoros were completed later and have two categories). These scores were weighted into regions (15
West, 7 Central, 17 East and 5 Southern African countries, as defined by the United Nations) to pinpoint any
patterns of zoonotic disease preparedness strengths [27].
The guidelines for how scores are ascribed are outlined
in the JEE Tool [22]. Data was analysed as described in
[24].
Findings
When the SSA mean score for the sub-area ‘Zoonotic
Disease’ was compared to the other sub-areas, it scored
2.35, placing it 5th out of 19 (range 1.33–3.38; p <
0.0001). The sub-area ‘Immunization’ ranked highest,
with an average SSA score of 3.38, whilst ‘Medical countermeasures and personnel deployment’ scored lowest,
with a SSA average of 1.33.
The mean score for all SSA countries for ‘Zoonotic
Disease’ was 7% higher than the mean overall JEE preparedness score for SSA. Figure 1 shows the mean ‘Zoonotic Disease’ score for each country by colour category,
as described in the JEE tool document.
When the mean for SSA countries was weighted by
‘Zoonotic Disease’ category, there was a significant difference between the mean SSA category scores (p =
Elton et al. One Health Outlook
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Table 1 Zoonotic disease preparedness categories and the indicators assessed. Indicators are taken from the scoring table (see the
JEE tool, second edition [25]) or a technical question answer from the written report
Category
Indicator
Source
Surveillance systems in place for priority zoonotic diseases/
pathogens (in this paper referred to as ‘Surveillance Systems’) (this
section is included in the JEE tool first and second editions)
Is there a national surveillance system in place for up to
5 priority zoonotic diseases?
Scoring table within
the JEE tools
document
Has a multisectoral agreement on 5 priority zoonotic
pathogens been made?
Technical questions
Is there a national surveillance system in place for more
than 5 zoonotic diseases?
Technical questions
Do clinical and veterinary laboratories communicate
data/results with each other?
Technical questions
Is there an animal health workforce capacity within the
national public health system and at all sub-national
levels?
Scoring table within
the JEE tools
document
Are there training opportunities for veterinary workers in
zoonotic disease and transmission?
Technical questions
Veterinary or animal health workforce (in this paper referred to as
‘Veterinary Workforce’) (this section is in the JEE tool first edition
only)
Mechanisms for responding to infectious and potential zoonotic
diseases are established and functional (in this paper referred to as
‘Response Mechanisms’) (this section is included in the JEE tool first
and second editions)
Is an established multisectoral operational action plan for Scoring table within
coordinated response to outbreaks of zoonotic diseases the JEE tools
document
in place?
Do you have an established inter-agency zoonotic disease response team?
Technical questions
Do you have the capacity to respond to 80% of zoonotic Technical questions
events in a timely manner?
0.0006) (Table 2). ‘Veterinary Workforce’ had the highest score of 2.76 (range 1.00–4.00). The category ‘Response Mechanisms’ had the lowest averaged score of
1.84 (range 1.00–4.00).
Each zoonotic disease preparedness indicator had a
score, but the depth of written responses to the questions varied. In the ‘Surveillance Systems’ category 70%
SSA countries reported undertaking surveillance for between 1 and 5 zoonotic diseases and 27% reported
undertaking surveillance for more than 5 zoonotic diseases. A list of priority pathogens, agreed across health
and veterinary sectors, is in place for 43% SSA countries
and 23% SSA countries indicated that their clinical and
veterinary laboratories/departments communicated with
each other.
In the ‘Veterinary Workforce’ category, 30% reported
having veterinarians in all districts, thus having sufficient
country-wide veterinary staffing and 70% of countries reported having training courses for their veterinarians
and animal health workers in public health.
In the category ‘Response Mechanisms’, 14% of SSA
countries reported having a multisectoral National Action Plan in place for zoonotic diseases, whilst 32% of
countries reported having an established inter-agency response team for zoonotic diseases. Fewer (9%) reported
having the capacity to respond to 80% of zoonotic events
on time (although this indicator had the fewest responses, with 55% of countries not making reference to
it in the written report). The SSA country responses to
the zoonotic disease preparedness indicators are described in Table 3.
When category scores were weighted by region, it
showed that Southern Africa had the highest mean score
across all ‘Zoonotic Disease’ categories (range: 1.71–
2.87). Table 4 shows the regional mean scores for each
of the ‘Zoonotic Disease’ categories, as well as mean
‘Zoonotic Disease’ category and overall JEE mean scores.
The regions showed significant differences in all categories except ‘Response Mechanisms’.
When assessing the preparedness indicators, Southern
Africa had the highest percentage of countries with an
approved list of priority pathogens (60%), surveillance in
place for > 5 zoonotic diseases (60%), sufficient veterinarians in all districts (60%) and public health training
for veterinary and animal health practitioners (100%).
Central Africa had the highest percentage of countries
reporting surveillance for between 1 and 5 zoonotic diseases (100%) and having multisectoral National Action
Plans for zoonotic diseases (33%). West Africa had the
highest percentage of countries reporting having an
established inter-agency zoonotic disease response team
(33%) and East Africa had the highest percentage of
countries reporting that clinical and veterinary laboratories/services communicated with each other (29%) and
having the capacity to respond to 80% of zoonotic events
on time (17%).
Nineteen countries indicated that they had a
multisector-approved list of priority zoonotic pathogens
Elton et al. One Health Outlook
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Fig. 1 Map showing SSA country mean zoonotic disease preparedness scores. Red = a score of 1 (‘no capacity’). Yellow = 2 or 3 (‘limited or
developed capacity’) and green = a score of 4 or 5 (‘demonstrated capacity’ or ‘sustainable capacity’). Countries that have not completed a JEE
report are shown in black and North African countries not included in this review are coloured grey. For the countries included in this study,
please see [27]
Table 2 Percentage of countries according to score and category. The p value indicates significant difference between the
categories
Score (capacity)
Surveillance Systems
Veterinary Workforce
Response Mechanisms
1 (no)
8 (18%)
3 (7%)
17 (40%)
2 (limited)
13 (30%)
11 (27%)
18 (43%)
3 (developed)
19 (43%)
16 (39%)
8 (19%)
4 (demonstrated)
3 (7%)
8 (20%)
1 (2%)
5 (sustainable)
1 (2%)
0 (0%)
0 (0%)
Mean score
2.45
2.76
1.84
p value
p = 0.0006
Elton et al. One Health Outlook
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(2021) 3:5
Table 3 The percentage of countries stating that they had an indicator established
Category
Region (Number of countries)
Surveillance
Surveillance system for ≤5 diseases
Veterinary Workforce
Response Mechanisms
All SSA countries
West
Central
East
Southern
(44)
(15)
(7)
(17)
(5)
34 (77%)
11 (73%)
7 (100%)
13 (76%)
3 (60%)
List of 5 priority zoonotic pathogens
19 (43%)
6 (40%)
2 (29%)
8 (47%)
3 (60%)
Surveillance system for > 5 diseases
13 (30%)
4 (27%)
2 (29%)
4 (24%)
3 (60%)
Clinical and veterinary communication
11 (25%)
4 (27%)
1 (14%)
5 (29%)
1 (20%)
National veterinary workforce capacity
13 (30%)
3 (20%)
1 (14%)
6 (35%)
3 (60%)
Veterinary worker training
31 (70%)
11 (73%)
3 (43%)
12 (71%)
5 (100%)
Established multisectoral action plan
6 (14%)
0 (0%)
2 (29%)
3 (18%)
1 (20%)
Inter-agency zoonotic response team
15 (34%)
6 (40%)
2 (29%)
6 (35%)
1 (20%)
Capacity to respond to 80% of events
4 (9%)
0 (0%)
1 (14%)
3 (18%)
0 (0%)
and had listed some or all of those diseases. The zoonotic diseases that appeared most in reported country
priority lists were rabies and Highly Pathogenic Avian
Influenza (HPAI) (both 89%), anthrax (83%), and brucellosis (78%) (Fig. 2). Whilst some of these are defined as
‘true’ zoonotic diseases, others such as Dengue and
SARS are defined as emerging infectious diseases [28].
Twenty three pathogens were reported to be on SSA
country priority pathogen lists and a further seven were
identified as important zoonotic pathogens (either in
countries without an approved priority list, or as nonpriority but still worthy of surveillance).
Discussion
JEEs are an effective way to highlight a country’s ability
to address global health issues, including zoonotic diseases and outbreaks. That the mean ‘Zoonotic Disease’
score for SSA countries is higher than the overall JEE
score, and that ‘Zoonotic Diseases’ ranks 5th in the JEE
sub-areas, suggests that zoonoses and outbreaks are perceived to be of importance by most African countries.
However, as there was a larger range in the ‘Zoonotic
Disease’ scores compared to the overall JEE score, this
suggests that zoonoses are a greater priority in some
countries than others. This may reflect the geography,
land use, and prevalence and usage of animal species in
communities, as well as the donor driven initiatives,
which might dictate how often humans come into
contact with these zoonotic diseases and therefore how
often cases or spill over may occur.
‘Veterinary Workforce’ scored highest of the three
‘Zoonotic Diseases’ categories. This is potentially a very
positive aspect of the scores, as having active national
disease surveillance and well-trained staff is an excellent
basis upon which to build an effective zoonotic disease
preparedness system. The category ‘Response Mechanisms’ scored lowest and therefore concentrating on
building up these factors, and disseminating to the appropriate veterinary or animal health staff within the national public health system, may quickly improve
country scores.
The written reports accompanying the scores gave a
deeper insight into the facilities and measures currently
in place and yet to be achieved for each SSA country, although this depended on the depth of the response. For
the category ‘Surveillance Systems’, whilst three quarters
reported that they undertake surveillance for 1–5 zoonotic diseases, under half reported having a list of priority pathogens agreed by all sectors. This suggests that
although zoonotic diseases are certainly on the radar of
many SSA countries, many do not yet have the regulatory and administrative capacity in place to fully manage
the problem, although the process of prioritising has
been published by a number of countries, enabling
others to follow suit [29, 30]. That only one quarter of
countries reported that their clinical and veterinary
Table 4 SSA mean zoonotic preparedness category scores by region. Southern Africa had the highest mean ‘Zoonotic Disease’
score. All categories except ‘Response Mechanisms’ showed significant differences in scores between regions
Total countries (in SSA) Surveillance Veterinary Workforce Response Mechanisms ‘Zoonotic Disease’ category mean Overall JEE mean
West
15
2.00
2.20
1.87
2.02
2.09
Central
7
1.57
1.57
2.00
1.71
1.75
East
17
2.29
2.59
2.00
2.29
2.38
Southern
5
2.40
4.00
2.20
2.87
2.40
p = 0.0017
p = 0.0036
P = 0.3947
p = 0.0006
p = 0.0074
p value
Elton et al. One Health Outlook
(2021) 3:5
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Fig. 2 Histogram to show zoonotic diseases by the percentage of countries citing them on their priority pathogen lists. Rabies, Highly
Pathogenic Avian Influenza (HPAI), anthrax, brucellosis and bovine tuberculosis were most frequently reported on SSA country priority pathogen
lists. MERS-CoV stands for Middle East respiratory syndrome and BSE stands for bovine spongiform encephalopathy. The diseases included in the
term ‘Haemorrhagic fevers’ varies between countries
laboratories communicated with each other suggests that
real gains could be made by bringing together the different sectors to create One Health guidelines. The OIE
have created a version of the JEEs, evaluating veterinary
services, although so far data from these surveys are
available for only 36 countries [31]. If the two were to be
combined, this would create a much more cohesive response to global health issues.
This is especially true when the fact that, in the ‘Veterinary Workforce’ category, almost three quarters of SSA
countries reported having public health training for their
veterinary and animal health staff within the national
public health workforce, who are capable of following
these guidelines. A list of One Health training programmes and resources has been compiled by Rwego
et al. (2016) [34]. By increasing the amount of trained
veterinary and animal health professionals, and therefore
increasing the regional coverage, the lower scoring aspects can be developed and successfully rolled out across
a country.
In the ‘Response Mechanisms’ category, one third of
countries reported having an established inter-agency response team in place, although only six countries reported having a multisectoral National Action Plan in
place. This suggests that whilst many countries are engaging their different departments to tackle zoonotic diseases, more work needs to be done to improve
legislation, which should enable a more successful response. The adoption of a resolution with an emphasis
on the One Health approach for the successful control
of 17 neglected tropical diseases, including zoonoses, at
the World Health Assembly in 2013 suggests that there
is an international urge to move this forward [32].
When the scores were weighted into regions, countries
in the Southern African region had the highest mean
‘Zoonotic Disease’ preparedness score, whilst countries
in the Central African region had the lowest. The score
for countries in the Southern African region was bolstered by a particularly high ‘Veterinary Workforce’
score compared to the other regions, which suggests that
lessons could be learned from this region in terms of the
training of veterinary staff in the animal and public
health sectors.
That all but one of the top six most reported priority
pathogens are well established diseases with a long history of human-animal transmission suggests that SSA
has so far struggled to control these zoonoses adequately. Cost effective control measures already exist
for several neglected zoonotic diseases such as rabies
and brucellosis [4], so the fact that they are on around
three quarters of SSA country’s priority pathogen lists
suggests that more effective systems may need to be implemented, utilising some of this study’s highlighted
points, such as greater communication between veterinary and clinical services.
Other commonly cited zoonoses were salmonella,
Ebola, and haemorrhagic diseases (for some countries,
this collectively included Ebola). The latter two are
classed as emerging infectious diseases, which have
jumped from being zoonoses to having human to human
transmission. Some countries have to contend not only
with well established, ‘neglected’ zoonoses, but also with
Elton et al. One Health Outlook
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novel ones, which, in the cases of SARS-CoV-2 and
Ebola, can put extreme pressure on already often
stretched healthcare and infrastructure systems, especially when a country does not have the capacity to respond effectively. Countries reporting the dual problem
of established and emerging zoonoses are the ones who
need a robust response system the most and are more
likely to require assistance and guidance when it comes
to zoonotic disease preparedness.
Control measures, not just for zoonotic diseases but
for many other diseases, have historically been undertaken individually or in isolation. Stakeholders must embrace the multifactorial, and multisectoral approach to
gain the maximum benefit out of these improvements.
Zoonoses and their outbreaks need to be recognised as a
One Health problem and, as such, greater cooperation
must occur between departments to ensure the problems are approached from all sides. Whilst costs for zoonotic disease interventions may seem costly on top of
public health strategies, the long term benefit and overall
cost effectiveness is likely to be greater [33].
Conclusions
As zoonotic outbreaks do not respect political borders,
and having identified regions with more developed control strategies, this is an excellent opportunity for countries with more advanced zoonotic disease programmes
(such as those in the Southern African region) to help
other nations improve, by sharing protocols, strategies
and training, thus providing better coverage across the
continent, and globally. Groups from the region, e.g.
SACIDS (http://www.sacids.org/) should be called upon
to tailor their knowledge and share it with the rest of the
continent. SSA countries need to fully utilise public
health, veterinary and environmental government departments, as well as the advice and fundamental research of both African and global organisations,
including One Health consortia, such as the Pan-African
network PANDORA-ID-Net (www.pandora-id.net), if
they are to build a robust One Health zoonotic disease
preparedness response.
Study highlights
‘Veterinary Workforce’ was the strongest category
across SSA
‘Response Mechanisms’ was the weakest category
across SSA, and that improving communication
between clinical, veterinary and environmental
sectors could improve zoonotic disease responses
Southern Africa had the highest mean score for all
‘Zoonotic Disease’ categories, suggesting that other
countries could adapt their strengths to their own
situations
30% of SSA countries had veterinarians in all
districts
The 5 most-cited zoonoses on SSA priority pathogen lists are rabies, Highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI), anthrax, brucellosis and bovine
tuberculosis, all of which are ‘neglected’ diseases
Abbreviations
SSA: Sub Saharan Africa; JEE: Joint external evaluation; WHO: World Health
Organisation; LMIC: Low and Middle Income Country; US CDC: United States
Centers for Disease Control; OIE: World Organisation for Animal Health;
FAO: Food and Agriculture Organisation; HPAI: Highly Pathogenic Avian
Influenza; HIC: High Income Country; IHR: International Health Regulations
Acknowledgements
Not applicable.
Authors’ information (optional)
Not applicable.
Authors’ contributions
LE analysed the data and drafted the manuscript. AZ, RK and TMcH
incorporated comments, additions and feedback throughout the revision. All
authors reviewed the manuscript and approved the final version of the
manuscript.
Funding
All authors are members of the Pan-African Network on Emerging and ReEmerging Infections (PANDORA-ID-NET – https://www.pandora-id.net/)
funded by the European and Developing Countries Clinical Trials Partnership
the EU Horizon 2020 Framework Programme for Research and Innovation
(RIA2016E-1609).
Availability of data and materials
The datasets analysed during the current study are available in the World
Health Organization’s website repository. These datasets were derived from
the following public domain resources: https://www.who.int/ihr/procedures/
mission-reports/en/
Ethics approval and consent to participate
Not applicable.
Consent for publication
Not applicable.
Competing interests
The authors declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the
research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.
Author details
1
Centre for Clinical Microbiology, Division of Infection & Immunity, University
College London, London, UK. 2Royal Veterinary College, London, UK.
3
University of Lusaka, Lusaka, Zambia. 4Institute for Tropical Medicine,
University of Tübingen, Tübingen, Germany. 5Congolese Foundation for
Medical Research, Brazzaville, Republic of Congo. 6National Institute for
Health Research Biomedical Research Centre, University College London
Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, London, UK.
Received: 22 September 2020 Accepted: 10 February 2021
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