ZOONOTIC DISEASES
ACTION PACKAGE
Leading countries : Indonesia, Vietnam
TOPICS
How do Action Package leading countries engage
other participating countries?
What are the challenges and opportunities in
implementing the GHSA Action Packages roadmap?
What are the Action Packages activities for 2016?
What are the coordination mechanism and efforts to
be taken to strengthen the Action Packages?
What are best practices to be shared?
Is there external assistance required for
1. How do Action Package leading countries engage
other participating countries?
•
To explore the participation of other countries and
organizations in ZDAP and possible solicitation to
join and / or play a ZDAP leadership role
2. What are the challenges and opportunities in
implementing the GHSA Action Packages roadmap?
•
Challenges and opportunities identified in the use
of PVS and IHR 2005 within JEE tools, particularly in
the areas of coordination, collaboration and an
3. Current Activities (2014 - 2016)
1. Building Global Commitment to Multi sector Approach to Manage
Emerging Zoonotic Diseases in Support of the GSHA within the
framework of Public Health
2. ASEAN Strategy on Rabies Elimination and the Action Plan
3. Update activities with GHSA steering group
4. OIE conference in Paris in June 2015
5. International Conference on ZDAP in Viet Nam
ZDAP Action Plan
6. The Asia
–
Pacific Workshop on Multisectoral Collaboration for
Prevention and Control of Zoonoses in Saporo Jepang in 2015
7. Global elimination of dog-mediated human rabies
–
The Time is Now,
and the technical pre-meeting with the WHO Collaborating Centers in
Geneva in 2015
8. Send assessors to JEE
9. 2
ndZDAP meeting at Ritz Carlton Mega Kuningan Jakarta 22 August
•
Effort will be made to
improve (non-technical)
communication about the
importance and relevance
of Zoonoses and One
Health to the public and
policy/decision-makers,
including with ministries of
finance, home affairs,
planning, interior, etc.
•
All GHSA participating
countries must strengthen
their use of PVS in harmony
with JEE and other tools in
line with the targets stated
in their ZDAP Road Map
taking into account lessons
learnt and best practices
adopted in other countries
4. What are the coordination mechanism and efforts
•
Integrated zoonoses prevention and control program
•
Enhance of knowledge and skill among health workers
and education sectors
•
Integrated communities empowerment through IEC
•
Integrated Surveillance System, outbreak investigation
and reporting from Districts/Cities, Province, Central
level (Avian Influenza, Rabies, Anthrax, etc.)
•
Sentinel surveillance of zoonoses
•
Zoonoses Epidemiology and Laboratory Network (Four
Way Linking)
•
Expert meeting of zoonoses integrated human and
animal health
Intersector Coordination, Cooperation and Partnership
Collaboration for Zoonoses Control in Indonesia, 1972- Now
MOU 1972 3 MiINISTER DECREE
1978 NATIONAL COMSION AI
CONTROL , PANDEMIC PREPAREDNESS 2006
NATIONAL COMISSION of ZOONOSIS CONTROL 2011-
DG CDC MoH, DG
Organization 2 DIRECTORATE GENERAL -
3 MINISTRY NATIONAL COMMISISON,
PROV and District COMiSSION
NATIONAL COMMISISION, PROV and DISTRICT
COMMSION 2 COORD MINISTER, 17
MINISTER, 2 (NATIONAL ARMY and POLICE) , INDONESIA RED CROSS
COORD MINISTER of PEOPLE WELFARE, 14
MINISTER,NATIONAL ARMY,NATIONAL POLICE, INDONESIA RED CROSS
OBJECTIVE STRENGTHEN
ZOONOSIS CONTROL
STRENGTHEN RABIES CONTROL
AI CONTROL and
PANDEMIC INFLUENZA PREPAREDNESS. S
STRENGTHEN of ZOONOSIS CONTROL
•
Enhance capacity and number of human resource
•
Technical assisstance support (WHO and FAO) for
zoonoses experties: Rabies, Pes, Leptospirosis and
Antraks, etc
•
Strengten laboratorium capacity for zoonoses
•
Research development support on zoonoses;
6. Is there external assistance required for
Key Milestones & Activities for 2016
1. Collaboration on International Health Regulation (IHR)
and Performance Veterinary Services (PVS) Training for
human and animal health services
2. Enhance and strengthen surveillance and diagnose (early
detection) of human and animal health using the existing
system
3. Advocacy of policy and regulation on trade and production
of poultry and other farm animal for national multisectoral
stakeholder
4. Strengthen real-time bio-surveillance on animal and
human implementation
Five-Year Action Items
1. Emphasize One Health approaches across all relevant sectors of government
2. Implement joint IHR and PVS training programs for human and animal health services
3. Increase the compatibility of existing animal and human diagnostics and surveillance data fields
4. Introduce and develop national multi-sector policies and regulatory guidelines promoting poultry and livestock production and marketing practices
5. Support the implementation of national architecture for real-time
bio-surveillance, spanning animal and human populations to support disease monitoring and reporting
6. Actively address the proposal of core competencies and systems requirements for implementation of the surveillance system
7. Enhance, link, and increase analytic capability within disease reporting systems, to ensure that WHO, FAO, and OIE receive pertinent information 8. Introduce an operational framework that supports multi-sector notification
for outbreaks of suspected zoonotic origin in the early stage of emergence 9. Introduce systems that promote complementary research for public health