1. Global Avian Influenza Surveillance in Wild Birds: A Strategy to Capture Viral Diversity - Volume 21, Number 4—April 2015 - Emerging Infectious Diseases journal - CDC
- Author
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Machalaba, Catherine C, Elwood, Sarah E, Forcella, Simona, Smith, Kristine M, Hamilton, Keith, Jebara, Karim B, Swayne, David E, Webby, Richard J, Mumford, Elizabeth, Mazet, Jonna AK, Gaidet, Nicolas, Daszak, Peter, and Karesh, William B
- Subjects
Medical Microbiology ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Biodefense ,Infectious Diseases ,Prevention ,Pneumonia & Influenza ,Emerging Infectious Diseases ,Influenza ,Vaccine Related ,2.2 Factors relating to the physical environment ,Aetiology ,Infection ,Good Health and Well Being ,Animals ,Animals ,Wild ,Birds ,Cost-Benefit Analysis ,Databases ,Factual ,Genetic Variation ,Global Health ,Humans ,Influenza in Birds ,Mandatory Reporting ,Orthomyxoviridae ,Population Surveillance ,Web Browser ,OIE ,One Health ,Organisation for Animal Health ,animal diseases ,disease reservoirs ,epidemiologic monitoring ,genetic databases ,genetic variation ,genomic library ,global avian influenza surveillance ,influenza ,influenza virus ,molecular evolution ,viral diversity ,viruses ,wild birds ,zoonoses ,Public Health and Health Services ,Microbiology ,Clinical sciences ,Epidemiology ,Health services and systems - Abstract
Wild birds play a major role in the evolution, maintenance, and spread of avian influenza viruses. However, surveillance for these viruses in wild birds is sporadic, geographically biased, and often limited to the last outbreak virus. To identify opportunities to optimize wild bird surveillance for understanding viral diversity, we reviewed responses to a World Organisation for Animal Health-administered survey, government reports to this organization, articles on Web of Knowledge, and the Influenza Research Database. At least 119 countries conducted avian influenza virus surveillance in wild birds during 2008-2013, but coordination and standardization was lacking among surveillance efforts, and most focused on limited subsets of influenza viruses. Given high financial and public health burdens of recent avian influenza outbreaks, we call for sustained, cost-effective investments in locations with high avian influenza diversity in wild birds and efforts to promote standardized sampling, testing, and reporting methods, including full-genome sequencing and sharing of isolates with the scientific community.
- Published
- 2015