Abstract

BackgroundZoonotic diseases account for over 60% of all communicable diseases causing illness in humans and 75% of recently emerging infectious diseases. As limited resources are available for the control and prevention of zoonotic diseases, it is necessary to prioritize diseases in order to direct resources into those with the greatest needs. The selection of criteria for prioritization has traditionally been on the basis of expert opinion; however, details of the methods used to identify criteria from expert opinion often are not published and a full range of criteria may not be captured by expert opinion.Methodology/Principal FindingsThis study used six focus groups to identify criteria for the prioritization of zoonotic diseases in Canada. Focus groups included people from the public, animal health professionals and human health professionals. A total of 59 criteria were identified for prioritizing zoonotic diseases. Human-related criteria accounted for the highest proportion of criteria identified (55%), followed by animal-related criteria (26%) then pathogen/disease-related criteria (19%).Similarities and differences were observed in the identification and scoring of criteria for disease prioritization between groups; the public groups were strongly influenced by the individual-level of disease burden, the responsibility of the scientific community in disease prioritization and the experiences of recent events while the professional groups were influenced by the societal- and population-level of disease burden and political and public pressure.Conclusions/SignificanceThis was the first study to describe a mixed semi-quantitative and qualitative approach to deriving criteria for disease prioritization. This was also the first study to involve the opinion of the general public regarding disease prioritization. The number of criteria identified highlights the difficulty in prioritizing zoonotic diseases. The method presented in this paper has formulated a comprehensive list of criteria that can be used to inform future disease prioritization studies.

Highlights

  • Zoonotic diseases are defined by the World Health Organization (WHO) as those that are naturally transmitted between vertebrate animals and humans

  • Six separate lists of criteria were obtained from the focus groups; each group identified between 24 and 33 criteria during the exercise, a total of 164 criteria were identified across all groups (Table 3)

  • We present on a stakeholder-informed, mixed semi-quantitative and qualitative approach to identify a list of criteria that can be used to prioritize zoonotic diseases in Canada

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Summary

Introduction

Zoonotic diseases are defined by the World Health Organization (WHO) as those that are naturally transmitted between vertebrate animals and humans. Zoonotic diseases account for over 60% of all communicable diseases causing illness in humans and 75% of recently emerging infectious diseases [1,2]; each disease posing a varying degree of threat to public health. As limited resources are available for research, surveillance, control and prevention of zoonotic diseases, it is necessary to prioritize diseases in order to direct resources into those with the greatest needs. Zoonotic diseases account for over 60% of all communicable diseases causing illness in humans and 75% of recently emerging infectious diseases. As limited resources are available for the control and prevention of zoonotic diseases, it is necessary to prioritize diseases in order to direct resources into those with the greatest needs. The selection of criteria for prioritization has traditionally been on the basis of expert opinion; details of the methods used to identify criteria from expert opinion often are not published and a full range of criteria may not be captured by expert opinion

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