A methodological framework for attributing the burden of animal disease to specific causes

13/06/2024

M. Bruce, W.T. Jemberu & A.J. Larkins

The Global Burden of Animal Diseases provides an analytical framework to measure the overall health of various farmed animal populations, estimate the farm-level burden of different diseases incorporating production losses due to morbidity and mortality, and health expenditure, and identify the wider economic and human health impacts. Attributing the burden of animal diseases to specific causes or groups of causes, requires methodological choices, including the classification of diseases, and the resulting health states that manifest in the loss of production. The aim of this paper is to address the key challenges of the process including the ambiguity in terminology, data availability and collation, and adjustments for comorbidity. Using infection with zoonotic Brucella spp. in small ruminants as an aetiological cause of disease and abortion as a sequela of multiple diseases practical examples are provided. Cause-specific attribution of the burden of animal disease captures temporal and spatial trends, which is essential for planning, monitoring, and evaluating animal health programmes and disease interventions.

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43