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Public-private partnerships for animal health

Strenghtening laboratories for local economies and food safety







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    Policy brief
    Biosecurity in pig farms and the provision of animal health services in the United Republic of Tanzania: Should public-private partnerships be the way forward?
    A snapshot from public and private livestock field officers in Sumbawanga
    2024
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    The Progressive Management Pathway for Terrestrial Animal Biosecurity (PMP-TAB) is a collaborative, stepwise approach to assessing and managing biological risks, to strengthen biosecurity in terrestrial animal production and associated value chains. Strengthening biosecurity will minimise health threats, including disease and antimicrobial resistance, improve production and enhance livelihoods through socioeconomic benefits. In Tanzania, the focus is on pig value chain actors, initially producers, to adopt minimum biosecurity practices at the farm level. This brief presents a snapshot of biosecurity in the Tanzania pig sector and a quick assessment of the capacity of public and private animal health services suppliers to interact and cooperate with livestock farmers and facilitate their adoption of good biosecurity practices and compliance with animal health legislation to ensure prevention and timely detection of animal disease and improve health outcomes. Existing laws, regulations and guidelines on biosecurity can make a difference only to the extent they reach and are applied by livestock farmers.
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    Brochure, flyer, fact-sheet
    Applying Public-Private Partnerships to control Foot-and-mouth and similar transboundary animal diseases
    Training course
    2022
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    This course is suitable for colleagues in public veterinary services, in particular, those who are involved in designing and implementing Foot-and-mouth and similar Transboundary animal diseases (FAST) control plans; and those within legal, finance and planning departments within the Veterinary Services. The course is also relevant for private sector stakeholders with interest in involvement in activities related to animal health and specifically control of infectious diseases of livestock; for national and regional associations of farmers, veterinarians, paraprofessionals, pharmaceutical and vaccine producers, distributors, companies, and non-government organizations.
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    Policy brief
    Africa Sustainable Livestock 2050: Public–private engagement at local level to support One Health policy implementation
    A stepwise approach based on experiences from the poultry value chain in Uganda
    2023
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    Uganda has a relatively comprehensive policy and regulatory framework to prevent, detect and respond to outbreaks of zoonotic diseases and AMR along the livestock value chain. Its full implementation, however, remains a challenge. One of the reasons is that there is little systematic information on the challenges and constraints policy implementers face on the ground. The FAO, through the Africa Sustainable Livestock 2050 Project, has joined forces with the government of Uganda and the district governments of Mukono and Wakiso and other stakeholders to support the implementation of the existing policy and regulatory framework along the poultry value chain. This brief provides a summary of the efforts made over the past two years in close collaboration with private and public stakeholders.

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