Hepatitis: Ceccato P

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A digest of articles written 1999 and later, on the topic "Hepatitis," originating from Planet Earth —» Ceccato P.  Display:  All Citations ·  All Abstracts
1 Review The impact of climate change on the epidemiology and control of Rift Valley fever. 2008

Martin V, Chevalier V, Ceccato P, Anyamba A, De Simone L, Lubroth J, de La Rocque S, Domenech J. · Emergency Centre for the Control of Transboundary Animal Diseases (ECTAD), FAO, Beijing, China. · Rev Sci Tech. · Pubmed #18819669 No free full text.

Abstract: Climate change is likely to change the frequency of extreme weather events, such as tropical cyclones, floods, droughts and hurricanes, and may destabilise and weaken the ecosystem services upon which human society depends. Climate change is also expected to affect animal, human and plant health via indirect pathways: it is likely that the geography of infectious diseases and pests will be altered, including the distribution of vector-borne diseases, such as Rift Valley fever, yellow fever, malaria and dengue, which are highly sensitive to climatic conditions. Extreme weather events might then create the necessary conditions for Rift Valley fever to expand its geographical range northwards and cross the Mediterranean and Arabian seas, with an unexpected impact on the animal and human health of newly affected countries. Strengthening global, regional and national early warning systems is crucial, as are co-ordinated research programmes and subsequent prevention and intervention measures.

2 Review Perspectives on using remotely-sensed imagery in predictive veterinary epidemiology and global early warning systems. free! 2007

Martin V, De Simone L, Lubroth J, Ceccato P, Chevalier V. · Emergency Centre for the Control of Transboundary Animal Diseases, FAO, Beijing, People's Republic of China. · Geospat Health. · Pubmed #18686251 links to  free full text

Abstract: Recent disease epidemics and their spread around the world have illustrated the weaknesses of disease surveillance and early warning systems (EWS), both at national and international levels. These diseases continuously threaten the livestock sector on a worldwide basis, some with major public health impact. EWS and accurate forecasting of new outbreaks of epidemic livestock diseases that may also affect wildlife, and the capacity for spread of such diseases to new areas is an essential pre-requisite to their effective containment and control. Because both the geographical and seasonal distribution of many infectious diseases are linked to climate, the possibility of using climaterelated environmental factors as predictive indicators, in association with regular disease surveillance activities, has proven to be relevant when establishing EWS for climate-related diseases. This article reviews the growing importance of using geographical information systems in predictive veterinary epidemiology and its integration into EWS, with a special focus on Rift Valley fever. It shows that, once fully validated in a country or region, this technology appears highly valuable and could play an increasing role in forecasting major epidemics, providing lead time to national veterinary services to take action to mitigate the impact of the disease in a cost-effective manner.