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Appendix B Workshop Agenda DAY 1: JUNE 25, 2008 9:30â10:15 a.m. Registration and Check-in All participants must check in at the security desk. SESSION I: CHARGE AND STATEMENT OF THE PROBLEM 10:15â10:25 a.m. Welcome and Opening Remarks Marguerite Pappaioanou, Committee co-chair Gerald Keusch, Committee co-chair 10:25â10:45 a.m. Charge to the Committee from the Sponsor Dennis Carroll and Murray Trostle, USAID 10:45â11:15 a.m. Keynote Presentation: Convergence of forces behind emerging and reemerging zoonoses, and future trends in zoonoses Tracee Treadwell, CDC 11:15 a.m.â Panel Discussion: The need for a global and sustainable 12:00 p.m. surveillance system for zoonoses, and roles of various international organizations Moderator: Gerald Keusch, Committee co-chair 101
102 GLOBAL SURVEILLANCE OF ZOONOTIC DISEASES Panelists Nancy Cox, CDC ��������������������������� Stéphane de La Rocque, FAO Marlo Libel, Pan American Health Organization, on behalf of David Heymann, WHO Alejandro Thiermann, OIE Tracee Treadwell, CDC 12:00â1:00 p.m. Lunch on your own (speakers will have meal vouchers, committee to meet in closed session) SESSION II: ACTIVE SURVEILLANCE SYSTEMS FOR DETECTING ZOONOSES (Moderator: Mark Woolhouse, committee member) Animal Health Surveillance Systems This panel will discuss the varying methodologies used to conduct surveil- lance in different animal populations, including: poultry and livestock (for consumption), wildlife and exotic animals, marine mammals, and bush- meat. The presenters should: ⢠Briefly describe the surveillance activities/methodologies and current funding levels, special challenges to conducting surveillance in these different populations; ⢠Discuss the reliability/validity (including sensitivity and specificity) of data obtained from these surveillance systems, timeliness, access to dataâhow the data are shared/disseminated, what it would take to achieve sustainability over many years; and ⢠Highlight the major gaps and challenges. The session will focus on international surveillance initiatives, rather than U.S.-focused programs. 1:00â1:15 p.m. Global Early Warning System (GLEWS) and t  ransboundary disease surveillance program ��������������������������� Stéphane de La Rocque, FAO 1:15â1:30 p.m. OIE standards for identifying/diagnosing diseases, diagnostic confirmation, data collection and reporting from countries, network of reference laboratories, relationships with Chief Veterinary Officersâ committee work, food safety (Codex Alimentarius) Alejandro Thiermann, OIE
APPENDIX B 103 1:30â2:00 p.m. Surveillance and outbreak investigation of wildlifeâ terrestrial and marine animals, birds, Wildlife Disease Information Node ⢠Wildlife Disease Information NodeâJoshua Dein (on NBII), USGS National Wildlife Health Center ⢠Outbreak investigationâScott Wright, USGS National Wildlife Health Center 2:00â2:15 p.m. Ebola surveillance in nonhuman primates Pierre Rollin, CDC 2:15â2:30 p.m. Surveillance of bats Peter Daszak (for Jon Epstein), Consortium for Conservation Medicine 2:30â2:45 p.m. Surveillance of bushmeat and exotic animal consumption and GAINS William Karesh, Wildlife Conservation Society 2:45â3:00 p.m. Surveillance of infectious diseases in companion animals Larry Glickman, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill 3:00â3:45 p.m. Panel Discussion: Active surveillance systems, with presenters from Session II 3:45â4:00 p.m. Break SESSION III: EARLY WARNING SYSTEMS FOR ZOONOTIC DISEASES IN HUMANS (Moderator: Mo Salman, committee member) 4:00â5:00 p.m. Panelists will provide a brief description of the early warning system, discuss what works well in their systems, and more importantly, identify the gaps and challenges. ⢠Global Public Health Intelligence Network (GPHIN) Marlo Libel, PAHO
104 GLOBAL SURVEILLANCE OF ZOONOTIC DISEASES ⢠Global Outbreak Awareness and Response Network (GOARN) Marlo Libel, PAHO ⢠ProMED-Mail Peter Cowen, North Carolina State University ⢠U.S. Department of Defense, Global Emerging Infections Surveillance and Response System (DoD-GEIS) Tracy DuVernoy, U.S. Department of Defense ⢠ArboNET Marc Fischer, CDC (via teleconference) ⢠Emerging Infections Network (IDSA) Philip Polgreen, University of Iowa 5:00â6:00 p.m. Panel Discussion: Early warning systems, with presenters from Session III 6:00 p.m. Adjourn for the Day 6:30â8:30 p.m. Committee Working Dinner (closed session) DAY 2: JUNE 26, 2008 8:00â8:30 a.m. Registration and Check-in participants must check in at the security desk. All 8:30â8:45 a.m. Recap of Day 1 and Overview of Day 2 of the Workshop Gerald Keusch and Marguerite Pappaioanou, Committee co-chairs SESSION IV: LABORATORY AND EPIDEMIOLOGICAL CAPACITY (Moderator: Terry McElwain, committee member) Panel members will have 15 minutes each to discuss the successes and chal- lenges in developing laboratory and epidemiological capacity in resource- constrained countries. 8:45â9:00 a.m. Broad view of veterinary/agricultural laboratory capacity in resource-constrained countries (clinical and field training, BSL-3 labs, biosecurity issues) James Pearson, former director of National Veterinary Services Lab (retired)
APPENDIX B 105 9:00â9:15 a.m. Reference lab perspectiveâexperience serving as an OIE reference laboratory and providing technical assistance and training to countries in Africa on avian influenza; international policies for sharing specimens and resources and lab data Ilaria Capua, OIE 9:15â9:30 a.m. Training and deployment of assays in other countries and standardization of assays worldwide Barbara Martin, coordinator for the U.S. National Animal Health Laboratory Network 9:30â10:00 a.m. Experience and challenges in establishing and sustaining operation of laboratories in Tanzania with high-quality assurance Mmeta Grasford Yongolo, Virology Department of the Animal Diseases Research Institute 10:00â10:15 a.m. Integrated emerging infectious disease surveillance in Nairobi, Kenya Robert Breiman, CDC International Emerging Infectious Diseases Program 10:15â10:30 a.m. Clinical laboratory and epidemiological field training in Southeast Asia Jeremy Farrar, Oxford University Clinical Research Unit 10:30â11:00 a.m. Break 11:00 a.m.â Panel Discussion: Laboratory and epidemiological 12:00 p.m. capacity, with presenters from Session IV 12:00â1:15 p.m. Lunch on your own (speakers will have meal vouchers, committee to meet in closed session)
106 GLOBAL SURVEILLANCE OF ZOONOTIC DISEASES SESSION V: FACILITATING INFORMATION EXCHANGE, IMPROVING COMMUNICATION, AND IMPROVING POLICIES 1:15â2:30 p.m. Moderated Panel Discussion (20 minutes): Panelists: Ilaria Capua, OIE; Stéphane de La Rocque, FAO; Marlo Libel, WHO/PAHO; Sylvia Robles, The World Bank; Alejandro Thiermann, OIE (Gerald Keusch, moderator) ⢠International policies for sharing specimens and resources as well as laboratory and epidemiological data (speakers from WHO/PAHO and OIE); Indonesia incident ⢠Communication and interaction in outbreak investigations (speakers from WHO/PAHO, OIE, FAO) ⢠Economic and political constraints (OIE, The World Bank) ⢠Others? General Open Discussion (25 minutes) 2:30â3:00 p.m. Break SESSION VI: DEVELOPING A GLOBAL AND SUSTAINABLE SURVEILLANCE SYSTEM 3:00â5:15 p.m. Moderated General Discussion: Developing global sustainable surveillance and response to emerging zoonoses (Gerald Keusch and Marguerite Pappaioanou, moderators) Methodology, resources, interconnectedness, politics ⢠Sustainable versus surge ⢠Disease-specific sentinel surveillance versus Comprehensive and integrative surveillance ⢠Integration of tools for ongoing sentinel surveillance ⢠Whatâs working, whatâs not? ⢠Where do we go from here? 5:15â5:30 p.m. Closing Remarks Gerald Keusch and Marguerite Pappaioanou, Committee co-chairs 5:30 p.m. Adjourn