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The Global Effort to Eradicate Rinderpest

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Title The Global Effort to Eradicate Rinderpest
 
Creator Roeder, P.
Rich, Karl M.
 
Subject Rinderpest
 
Description During the past 70 years, concerted efforts by the national veterinary services of affected countries from Senegal to China and Russia to South Africa—aided by international organizations—have brought the once-dreaded rinderpest virus to the point of extinction. In the near future, we can expect to see a global declaration of freedom from rinderpest, the first time this has been achieved for a livestock disease. The devastation wrought by rinderpest stimulated the founding of veterinary schools in many countries, and provided the basis for the development of the veterinary profession. The legacy of control programs in the past 20 years includes vaccine innovations and the development of new epidemiological and surveillance tools that are based on participatory techniques. Additionally, the benefits derived from eradication are many, ranging from increased confidence in livestock-based agriculture to increased food security, protected rural livelihoods, technically more proficient veterinary services, an opening of trade into lucrative markets in the Middle East, and the safeguarding of Africa’s wildlife heritage from a serious threat to its dwindling populations. As for the financial benefits of rinderpest eradication, describing them is constrained because of a general lack of studies on the subject, and the fact that programs covering multiple issues often did not clearly discern the rinderpest problem. This analysis attempts to present lessons learned from the experience gained in eradicating rinderpest, and explores the socioeconomic gains made as a result.
 
Date 2009-11-25T05:01:57Z
2009-11-25T05:01:57Z
2009-11-15
 
Type Working Paper
 
Identifier Roeder, P. and K.M. Rich. 2009. The Global Effort to Eradicate Rinderpest. IFPRI Discussion Paper 00923. Washington DC: IFPRI.
https://hdl.handle.net/10568/130
 
Language en
 
Relation IFPRI Discussion Paper;00923
 
Format application/pdf
 
Publisher IFPRI