A critical epidemiological reality underpins WOAH’s new strategic direction: approximately 75% of emerging infectious diseases affecting human populations originate from animal sources, according to WHO data. This statistic underscores the urgency of strengthening global animal health surveillance systems before zoonotic pathogens transition to human populations.
WOAH’s 2027–2031 strategic plan directly addresses this disease interface through expanded surveillance capabilities, laboratory capacity building, and improved data-sharing mechanisms across member nations. The framework emphasizes early detection and rapid response systems designed to identify potential pandemic threats at their source.
The plan allocates particular attention to low- and middle-income countries, where resource constraints and technical gaps have historically compromised zoonotic disease monitoring. By strengthening these critical surveillance nodes, WOAH aims to establish a more resilient global early-warning system capable of detecting emerging threats before they achieve pandemic potential.
Read the full article on GMJ Newsroom.
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