'Animal disease detective' training package launched at World Health Summit in Berlin

October 19, 2023

The University of Sydney-led Asia Pacific Consortium of Veterinary Epidemiology (APCOVE) launched its world-class field training package on the sidelines of the World Health Summit in Berlin today. The package is designed to help veterinary practitioners and animal handlers detect and prevent infectious diseases in the field before they emerge as pandemics. The launch took place during the Global Field Epidemiology Partnership (GFEP) meeting as part of events around the World Health Summit. APCOVE Leader, Associate Professor Navneet Dhand from the Sydney School of Veterinary Science announced the modules at the meeting. He said: “This is the biggest resource for field veterinary epidemiology training globally.

APCOVE fellow Elaine Hevoho from Papua New Guinea.

The University of Sydney-led Asia Pacific Consortium of Veterinary Epidemiology (APCOVE) launched its world-class field training package on the sidelines of the World Health Summit in Berlin today. The package is designed to help veterinary practitioners and animal handlers detect and prevent infectious diseases in the field before they emerge as pandemics.

The launch took place during the Global Field Epidemiology Partnership (GFEP) meeting as part of events around the World Health Summit.

APCOVE Leader, Associate Professor Navneet Dhand from the Sydney School of Veterinary Science announced the modules at the meeting. He said: “This is the biggest resource for field veterinary epidemiology training globally. And it is now available free of cost for anyone.

“It provides a valuable resource for veterinary services around the globe to strengthen the capacity of their workforces to detect, prevent and contain infectious disease threats.”

“The risk of zoonotic diseases transferring from livestock and wildlife to humans is increasing, as shown by the COVID-19 pandemic,” Associate Professor Dhand said.

“So, training new generations of animal disease detectives at the frontline is vital to help prevent diseases wiping out livestock or infecting humans.”

The package comprises 36 eLearning modules on outbreak investigation, surveillance, data analysis, risk assessment, disease control, biosecurity, One Health, leadership and communication. The modules have been prepared by the collective efforts of more than 40 APCOVE partners from all veterinary schools in Australia and New Zealand, one veterinary school from the US and eight countries in the Asia Pacific over the past three years.

The source of this news is from University of Sydney

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