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GMJ News > GMJ Briefs > Critical Funding Gap in Animal Health Systems Threatens Global Pandemic Preparedness

Critical Funding Gap in Animal Health Systems Threatens Global Pandemic Preparedness

GMJ
Last updated: 03/06/2026 23:55
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GMJ News Desk
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Infographic showing animal health funding represents tiny fraction of global health spending
Animal health receives just 0.6% of global health spending despite mounting disease crises that pose significant risks to human populations. A new WOAH report reveals critical funding gaps threatening pandemic preparedness. — Photo: Life In Lens / Pexels
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1 min read|142 words

A new World Organisation for Animal Health report exposes a severe disparity in global health investment, with animal health receiving merely 0.6% of total health spending compared to 95% allocated to human health. This funding imbalance occurs despite evidence that approximately 75% of emerging infectious diseases originate in animals, underscoring a fundamental vulnerability in pandemic prevention strategies.

The consequences of this underfunding are increasingly evident through costly outbreaks including avian influenza, African swine fever, and foot-and-mouth disease, which have resulted in billions in economic losses worldwide. Beyond economic impact, inadequate animal health surveillance and response systems—particularly in low- and middle-income countries—create conditions for zoonotic disease spillover into human populations. The report emphasizes that investing in robust animal health infrastructure represents a cost-effective approach to global disease prevention, yet current allocation patterns suggest a disconnect between stated pandemic preparedness goals and actual resource deployment.

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