Abstract

Decisions around animal health management by stakeholders are often subject to resource limitation, therefore prioritization processes are required to evaluate whether effort is attributed appropriately. The objectives of this study were to develop and apply a surveillance prioritization process for animal health surveillance activities in Ireland. An exploratory sequential mixed research methods design was utilized. A prioritization tool was developed for surveillance activities and implemented over two phases. During the first phase, a survey was conducted which asked stakeholders to prioritize diseases/conditions by importance for Irish agriculture. In the second phase, experts identified the most important surveillance objectives, and allocated resources to the activities that they considered would best meet the surveillance objectives, for each disease/condition. This study developed a process and an accompanying user-friendly practical tool for animal disease surveillance prioritization which could be utilized by other competent authorities/governments. Antimicrobial resistance and bovine tuberculosis were ranked top of the endemic diseases/conditions in the Irish context, while African swine fever and foot and mouth disease were ranked top of the exotic diseases/conditions by the stakeholders. The study showed that for most of the diseases/conditions examined in the prioritization exercise, the respondents indicated a preference for a combination of active and passive surveillance activities. Future extensions of the tool could include prioritization on a per species basis.

Highlights

  • International experience has found that prioritization of expenditure on animal health is challenging but it is an important activity to ensure that resources are appropriately attributed [1,2,3]

  • The experts allocated 70% of the resources to active surveillance activities for bluetongue virus (BTV)

  • This study marked the development of a novel animal health surveillance activities prioritization process in Ireland, which could be applied in other countries

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Summary

Introduction

International experience has found that prioritization of expenditure on animal health is challenging but it is an important activity to ensure that resources are appropriately attributed [1,2,3]. Such prioritization efforts can contribute to multi-stakeholder engagement and network building. These are important for animal health in countries where agriculture makes a large social and economic contribution, for example, in Ireland and in countries that are limited in terms of resources. In December 2019 there were 6.4 million cattle (dairy and beef), 3.8 million sheep and 1.6 million pigs in Ireland [4]

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