World Livestock Disease Atlas : A Quantitative Analysis of Global Animal Health Data (2006-2009)

The authors have analyzed animal health data for the years 2006 through 2009 as reported by the World Organisation for Animal Health (OIE)-the four most recent 'World animal health yearbooks' available when the analysis was prepared. The...

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Main Authors: World Bank, TAFS Forum
Format: Report
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC and TAFS Forum, Bern 2017
Subjects:
BSE
PET
PIG
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/323671468179364909/World-livestock-disease-atlas-a-quantitative-analysis-of-global-animal-health-data-2006-2009
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/27118
id okr-10986-27118
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-271182021-04-23T14:04:40Z World Livestock Disease Atlas : A Quantitative Analysis of Global Animal Health Data (2006-2009) World Bank TAFS Forum AFFECTED COUNTRIES AFFECTED COUNTRY AFRICAN SWINE FEVER AGRICULTURE ORGANIZATION ALPACAS ANAEMIA ANAPLASMOSIS ANIMAL ANIMAL DISEASE ANIMAL DISEASES ANIMAL HEALTH ANIMAL HEALTH INFORMATION ANIMAL HEALTH INFORMATION SYSTEM ANIMAL LOSSES ANIMAL SOURCE FOODS ANTHRAX ARTHRITIS AVIAN DISEASES AVIAN INFLUENZA BABESIOSIS BIRD BOVINE SPONGIFORM ENCEPHALOPATHY BOVINE TUBERCULOSIS BRUCELLA BSE BUFFALO CAMELS CARCASS CATTLE CATTLE CATTLE CATTLE DISEASES CATTLE SHEEP CAUSES OF DEATH CHICKEN CLASSICAL SWINE FEVER CONSUMPTION OF LIVESTOCK PRODUCTS CONTAGIOUS BOVINE PLEUROPNEUMONIA CULLED CYSTICERCOSIS DEATHS DIARRHEA DIARRHOEA DISEASE CHARACTERISTICS DISEASE CONTROL DISEASE CONTROL EFFORTS DISEASE CONTROL STRATEGIES DISEASE INFORMATION DISEASE OUTBREAKS DISEASE PREVENTION DISEASE PREVENTION AND CONTROL DOMESTIC LIVESTOCK DUCK DUCKS ECONOMIC VALUE ECOSYSTEMS EGGS ENDEMIC DISEASES EQUIDAE FARM FARM ANIMALS FARMING SYSTEMS FARMS FOOD SAFETY FOOT-AND-MOUTH DISEASE FOWL FOWL CHOLERA FOWL TYPHOID GASTROENTERITIS GEESE GLOBAL ANIMAL HEALTH GOAT GOAT DISEASES GOATS GOOSE GUINEA FOWL H5N1 HEMORRHAGIC FEVER HEPATITIS HORSE HORSES HPAI INFECTIOUS BRONCHITIS INFECTIOUS ZOONOTIC DISEASE ISSUES JAPANESE ENCEPHALITIS LARYNGOTRACHEITIS LEPTOSPIROSIS LIVESTOCK LIVESTOCK DISEASE LIVESTOCK DISEASES LIVESTOCK HEALTH LIVESTOCK LOSSES LIVESTOCK POPULATION LIVESTOCK POPULATIONS LIVESTOCK PRODUCTS LIVESTOCK SECTOR LIVESTOCK SPECIES LIVESTOCK UNIT LIVESTOCK UNITS MEAT MILK MULE MULES NATIONAL LIVESTOCK NATURE NEWCASTLE DISEASE NUMBER OF DEATHS OUTBREAK OUTBREAKS OF AVIAN INFLUENZA PANDEMIC PANDEMICS PATHOGENIC AVIAN INFLUENZA PATHOGENS PET PIG PIGS POPULATION GROWTH POPULATION SIZE POULTRY POULTRY DISEASES POULTRY SECTOR PUBLIC HEALTH PULLORUM DISEASE Q FEVER RABIES RARE DISEASES RIFT VALLEY FEVER RUMINANTS SAFE FOOD SAFETY OF FOOD SEPTICAEMIA SHEEP SKIN DISEASE SLAUGHTER SLAUGHTERED SMALL FARMS SMALL RUMINANTS SPREAD OF DISEASES SURVEILLANCE PLAN SURVEILLANCE SYSTEMS SWINE SWINE FEVER SYNDROME THEILERIOSIS TRYPANOSOMOSIS TUBERCULOSIS TURKEYS VETERINARIANS VETERINARY VETERINARY AUTHORITIES VETERINARY SERVICES VIRUS WEIGHT GAIN WILD ANIMALS WILDLIFE WILDLIFE DISEASES ZOONOSES ZOONOTIC DISEASE ZOONOTIC DISEASES The authors have analyzed animal health data for the years 2006 through 2009 as reported by the World Organisation for Animal Health (OIE)-the four most recent 'World animal health yearbooks' available when the analysis was prepared. The data covers 176 countries and economies on 71 livestock diseases (30 zoonoses and 41 non-zoonotic diseases) and 8 species or groups of species (cattle, sheep and goat, swine, poultry, equidae, buffalo, cervidae, and camels). Losses due to death, destruction or slaughter were distinguished. In total, the scope of the analysis comprises about 2.7 million data points. On average, over the four years analyzed, the Islamic Republic of Iran, China, and Brazil lost the highest absolute numbers of Livestock Units (LSUs), while Israel, Iran, and Namibia suffered the highest losses relative to their livestock populations. Data need to be interpreted taking into account a potential reporting bias resulting from countries' different levels of reporting transparency and competency. This report is not based on the 'real' world animal health situation, but on the best information available to the authors. 2017-06-13T20:49:54Z 2017-06-13T20:49:54Z 2011-11 Report http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/323671468179364909/World-livestock-disease-atlas-a-quantitative-analysis-of-global-animal-health-data-2006-2009 http://hdl.handle.net/10986/27118 English en_US CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC and TAFS Forum, Bern Economic & Sector Work Economic & Sector Work :: Other Agriculture Study
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
en_US
topic AFFECTED COUNTRIES
AFFECTED COUNTRY
AFRICAN SWINE FEVER
AGRICULTURE ORGANIZATION
ALPACAS
ANAEMIA
ANAPLASMOSIS
ANIMAL
ANIMAL DISEASE
ANIMAL DISEASES
ANIMAL HEALTH
ANIMAL HEALTH INFORMATION
ANIMAL HEALTH INFORMATION SYSTEM
ANIMAL LOSSES
ANIMAL SOURCE FOODS
ANTHRAX
ARTHRITIS
AVIAN DISEASES
AVIAN INFLUENZA
BABESIOSIS
BIRD
BOVINE SPONGIFORM ENCEPHALOPATHY
BOVINE TUBERCULOSIS
BRUCELLA
BSE
BUFFALO
CAMELS
CARCASS
CATTLE
CATTLE CATTLE
CATTLE DISEASES
CATTLE SHEEP
CAUSES OF DEATH
CHICKEN
CLASSICAL SWINE FEVER
CONSUMPTION OF LIVESTOCK PRODUCTS
CONTAGIOUS BOVINE PLEUROPNEUMONIA
CULLED
CYSTICERCOSIS
DEATHS
DIARRHEA
DIARRHOEA
DISEASE CHARACTERISTICS
DISEASE CONTROL
DISEASE CONTROL EFFORTS
DISEASE CONTROL STRATEGIES
DISEASE INFORMATION
DISEASE OUTBREAKS
DISEASE PREVENTION
DISEASE PREVENTION AND CONTROL
DOMESTIC LIVESTOCK
DUCK
DUCKS
ECONOMIC VALUE
ECOSYSTEMS
EGGS
ENDEMIC DISEASES
EQUIDAE
FARM
FARM ANIMALS
FARMING SYSTEMS
FARMS
FOOD SAFETY
FOOT-AND-MOUTH DISEASE
FOWL
FOWL CHOLERA
FOWL TYPHOID
GASTROENTERITIS
GEESE
GLOBAL ANIMAL HEALTH
GOAT
GOAT DISEASES
GOATS
GOOSE
GUINEA FOWL
H5N1
HEMORRHAGIC FEVER
HEPATITIS
HORSE
HORSES
HPAI
INFECTIOUS BRONCHITIS
INFECTIOUS ZOONOTIC DISEASE
ISSUES
JAPANESE ENCEPHALITIS
LARYNGOTRACHEITIS
LEPTOSPIROSIS
LIVESTOCK
LIVESTOCK DISEASE
LIVESTOCK DISEASES
LIVESTOCK HEALTH
LIVESTOCK LOSSES
LIVESTOCK POPULATION
LIVESTOCK POPULATIONS
LIVESTOCK PRODUCTS
LIVESTOCK SECTOR
LIVESTOCK SPECIES
LIVESTOCK UNIT
LIVESTOCK UNITS
MEAT
MILK
MULE
MULES
NATIONAL LIVESTOCK
NATURE
NEWCASTLE DISEASE
NUMBER OF DEATHS
OUTBREAK
OUTBREAKS OF AVIAN INFLUENZA
PANDEMIC
PANDEMICS
PATHOGENIC AVIAN INFLUENZA
PATHOGENS
PET
PIG
PIGS
POPULATION GROWTH
POPULATION SIZE
POULTRY
POULTRY DISEASES
POULTRY SECTOR
PUBLIC HEALTH
PULLORUM DISEASE
Q FEVER
RABIES
RARE DISEASES
RIFT VALLEY FEVER
RUMINANTS
SAFE FOOD
SAFETY OF FOOD
SEPTICAEMIA
SHEEP
SKIN DISEASE
SLAUGHTER
SLAUGHTERED
SMALL FARMS
SMALL RUMINANTS
SPREAD OF DISEASES
SURVEILLANCE PLAN
SURVEILLANCE SYSTEMS
SWINE
SWINE FEVER
SYNDROME
THEILERIOSIS
TRYPANOSOMOSIS
TUBERCULOSIS
TURKEYS
VETERINARIANS
VETERINARY
VETERINARY AUTHORITIES
VETERINARY SERVICES
VIRUS
WEIGHT GAIN
WILD ANIMALS
WILDLIFE
WILDLIFE DISEASES
ZOONOSES
ZOONOTIC DISEASE
ZOONOTIC DISEASES
spellingShingle AFFECTED COUNTRIES
AFFECTED COUNTRY
AFRICAN SWINE FEVER
AGRICULTURE ORGANIZATION
ALPACAS
ANAEMIA
ANAPLASMOSIS
ANIMAL
ANIMAL DISEASE
ANIMAL DISEASES
ANIMAL HEALTH
ANIMAL HEALTH INFORMATION
ANIMAL HEALTH INFORMATION SYSTEM
ANIMAL LOSSES
ANIMAL SOURCE FOODS
ANTHRAX
ARTHRITIS
AVIAN DISEASES
AVIAN INFLUENZA
BABESIOSIS
BIRD
BOVINE SPONGIFORM ENCEPHALOPATHY
BOVINE TUBERCULOSIS
BRUCELLA
BSE
BUFFALO
CAMELS
CARCASS
CATTLE
CATTLE CATTLE
CATTLE DISEASES
CATTLE SHEEP
CAUSES OF DEATH
CHICKEN
CLASSICAL SWINE FEVER
CONSUMPTION OF LIVESTOCK PRODUCTS
CONTAGIOUS BOVINE PLEUROPNEUMONIA
CULLED
CYSTICERCOSIS
DEATHS
DIARRHEA
DIARRHOEA
DISEASE CHARACTERISTICS
DISEASE CONTROL
DISEASE CONTROL EFFORTS
DISEASE CONTROL STRATEGIES
DISEASE INFORMATION
DISEASE OUTBREAKS
DISEASE PREVENTION
DISEASE PREVENTION AND CONTROL
DOMESTIC LIVESTOCK
DUCK
DUCKS
ECONOMIC VALUE
ECOSYSTEMS
EGGS
ENDEMIC DISEASES
EQUIDAE
FARM
FARM ANIMALS
FARMING SYSTEMS
FARMS
FOOD SAFETY
FOOT-AND-MOUTH DISEASE
FOWL
FOWL CHOLERA
FOWL TYPHOID
GASTROENTERITIS
GEESE
GLOBAL ANIMAL HEALTH
GOAT
GOAT DISEASES
GOATS
GOOSE
GUINEA FOWL
H5N1
HEMORRHAGIC FEVER
HEPATITIS
HORSE
HORSES
HPAI
INFECTIOUS BRONCHITIS
INFECTIOUS ZOONOTIC DISEASE
ISSUES
JAPANESE ENCEPHALITIS
LARYNGOTRACHEITIS
LEPTOSPIROSIS
LIVESTOCK
LIVESTOCK DISEASE
LIVESTOCK DISEASES
LIVESTOCK HEALTH
LIVESTOCK LOSSES
LIVESTOCK POPULATION
LIVESTOCK POPULATIONS
LIVESTOCK PRODUCTS
LIVESTOCK SECTOR
LIVESTOCK SPECIES
LIVESTOCK UNIT
LIVESTOCK UNITS
MEAT
MILK
MULE
MULES
NATIONAL LIVESTOCK
NATURE
NEWCASTLE DISEASE
NUMBER OF DEATHS
OUTBREAK
OUTBREAKS OF AVIAN INFLUENZA
PANDEMIC
PANDEMICS
PATHOGENIC AVIAN INFLUENZA
PATHOGENS
PET
PIG
PIGS
POPULATION GROWTH
POPULATION SIZE
POULTRY
POULTRY DISEASES
POULTRY SECTOR
PUBLIC HEALTH
PULLORUM DISEASE
Q FEVER
RABIES
RARE DISEASES
RIFT VALLEY FEVER
RUMINANTS
SAFE FOOD
SAFETY OF FOOD
SEPTICAEMIA
SHEEP
SKIN DISEASE
SLAUGHTER
SLAUGHTERED
SMALL FARMS
SMALL RUMINANTS
SPREAD OF DISEASES
SURVEILLANCE PLAN
SURVEILLANCE SYSTEMS
SWINE
SWINE FEVER
SYNDROME
THEILERIOSIS
TRYPANOSOMOSIS
TUBERCULOSIS
TURKEYS
VETERINARIANS
VETERINARY
VETERINARY AUTHORITIES
VETERINARY SERVICES
VIRUS
WEIGHT GAIN
WILD ANIMALS
WILDLIFE
WILDLIFE DISEASES
ZOONOSES
ZOONOTIC DISEASE
ZOONOTIC DISEASES
World Bank
TAFS Forum
World Livestock Disease Atlas : A Quantitative Analysis of Global Animal Health Data (2006-2009)
description The authors have analyzed animal health data for the years 2006 through 2009 as reported by the World Organisation for Animal Health (OIE)-the four most recent 'World animal health yearbooks' available when the analysis was prepared. The data covers 176 countries and economies on 71 livestock diseases (30 zoonoses and 41 non-zoonotic diseases) and 8 species or groups of species (cattle, sheep and goat, swine, poultry, equidae, buffalo, cervidae, and camels). Losses due to death, destruction or slaughter were distinguished. In total, the scope of the analysis comprises about 2.7 million data points. On average, over the four years analyzed, the Islamic Republic of Iran, China, and Brazil lost the highest absolute numbers of Livestock Units (LSUs), while Israel, Iran, and Namibia suffered the highest losses relative to their livestock populations. Data need to be interpreted taking into account a potential reporting bias resulting from countries' different levels of reporting transparency and competency. This report is not based on the 'real' world animal health situation, but on the best information available to the authors.
format Report
author World Bank
TAFS Forum
author_facet World Bank
TAFS Forum
author_sort World Bank
title World Livestock Disease Atlas : A Quantitative Analysis of Global Animal Health Data (2006-2009)
title_short World Livestock Disease Atlas : A Quantitative Analysis of Global Animal Health Data (2006-2009)
title_full World Livestock Disease Atlas : A Quantitative Analysis of Global Animal Health Data (2006-2009)
title_fullStr World Livestock Disease Atlas : A Quantitative Analysis of Global Animal Health Data (2006-2009)
title_full_unstemmed World Livestock Disease Atlas : A Quantitative Analysis of Global Animal Health Data (2006-2009)
title_sort world livestock disease atlas : a quantitative analysis of global animal health data (2006-2009)
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC and TAFS Forum, Bern
publishDate 2017
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/323671468179364909/World-livestock-disease-atlas-a-quantitative-analysis-of-global-animal-health-data-2006-2009
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/27118
_version_ 1764463493518458880