Award details

GCRF One Health Poultry Hub

ReferenceBB/S011269/1
Principal Investigator / Supervisor Professor Fiona Tomley
Co-Investigators /
Co-Supervisors
Professor Sitara Swarna Rao Ajjampur, Professor Anthony Barnett, Dr Paritosh Biswas, Professor Damer Blake, Dr Gerald Bloom, Professor Ian Brown, Dr Vuong Bui, Professor Patricia Lynne Conway, Professor Duc Anh Dang, Dr Rajib Dasgupta, Dr Nitish Debnath, Dr Ayako Ebata, Dr Palika Fernando, Professor Meerjady Flora, Dr Guillaume Fournie, Dr Mohammad Giasuddin, Dr Marius Gilbert, Professor Sunetra Gupta, Dr Barbara Nicole Haesler, Dr Joerg Henning, Dr David Heymann, Dr Md. Ahasanul Hoque, Professor Munir Iqbal, Dr KIRUBAHARAN JOHN, Professor Chaitanya Joshi, Dr Madhvi Joshi, Dr Ruwani Kalupahana, Dr Prakash Koringa, Professor Nicola Lewis, Dr Hayley MacGregor, Professor Punam Mangtani, Professor Mahesh Moorthy, Dr Deepthi Madura Sri Munasinghe, Professor Raman Muthusamy, Dr Thi Dien Nguyen, Dr Dai Nguyen Van, Dr kumaravel P, Dr Azhahianambi Palavesam, Mr Ludovic Pelligand, Dr Marisa Peyre, Professor Dirk Pfeiffer, Dr Hoa Thi Thanh Pham, Dr Ngoc Pham, Dr Androniki Psifidi, Professor Oliver Pybus, Dr MOHAMMED SAMAD, Dr Dilan Satharasinghe, Dr Poornika Seelagama, Professor Ayona Silva-Fletcher, Dr Richard Stabler, Dr Giel Ton, Dr Gowthaman Vasudevan, Professor Dinh Ton Vu, Dr Shantha Wanninayake, Professor Brendan Wren
Institution Royal Veterinary College
DepartmentPathobiology and Population Sciences
Funding typeResearch
Value (£) 18,152,563
StatusCompleted
TypeResearch Grant
Start date 13/02/2019
End date 12/05/2024
Duration63 months

Abstract

unavailable

Summary

Urbanisation, accompanied by rising incomes, continues to lead increased demands for animal protein. Poultry meat and eggs are the biggest global source of protein for humans and a major challenge is to achieve sustainable expansion whilst reducing risk to health from 1) Epidemic Avian Influenza, 2) antimicrobial resistance, 3) foodborne zoonoses including Campylobacter, Salmonella and E. coli 4) Disruption of the natural chicken gut microbiome, leading to increased pathogen carriage. The research directly addresses UN Sustainable Development Goals 1 (No Poverty), 2 (Zero hunger) and 3 (Good health and well-being), and contributes also to 5 (Gender Equality) 6 (Clean water and sanitation), 9 (Industry, innovation and infrastructure), 11 (Sustainable cities and communities), and 12 (Responsible consumption and production) In South and SE Asia, poultry production is expanding rapidly and value chains are more diverse than in high-income settings. Intensification, in informal and organised poultry sectors, aims to produce cheap protein for families and for local, national and regional markets but it can also promote the generation of health hazards. High stocking densities, fast turnover, genetic homogeneity, complex transport and trading networks, live bird markets, poor biosecurity and inappropriate use of antimicrobials and vaccines all play roles in host-pathogen evolution and in selection of pathogen variants with increased virulence, vaccine and/or antimicrobial resistance and broadened host range. Through an iterative approach we will (1) establish specific causal connections between socio-economics, human behaviours, pathogen evolution and disease transmission, (2) identify 'nodes' of particularly high risk in poultry production chains and networks, and (3) test and evaluate interventions . Significant reductions in risk to human and animal health require holistic interventions (technical, behavioural and regulatory) designed for, and implemented across, all levels of production systems. By studying poultry value chains in four countries at differing stages of intensification (Bangladesh, India, Sri Lanka and Vietnam), we will achieve a deep and generalizable understanding of production factors that increase risk, including those that govern decision-making and behaviours along value chains. Using innovative methods that enhance existing microbiological, epidemiological and social science, we will contribute research-based evidence to support policies and systems that can meet anticipated demand whilst minimising adverse public health consequences. This includes designing interventions in well-characterised systems, evaluating their impacts, and generating research-informed models for resilient management of transition from lower to higher intensity systems. To ensure global relevance, we include settings that vary in their levels of intensification, as well as their epidemiological, socio-economic and cultural contexts. With an integrated vision, the Hub has a portfolio of scalable research and the capacity to play a strategic role in an innovative global agenda. We will explicitly build capacity for the interdisciplinary research that is essential for a Hub, and for supporting cross-sectorial collaborations at national and regional levels. Without effective stewardship by governments and transnational agencies and a greater understanding of the global political economy of chicken production, we hypothesise that the risk of deleterious outcomes of intensification will increase as poultry production continues to scale up dramatically and demand increased inputs, such as processed feed and antibiotics.

Impact Summary

Our Hub's outputs are intended to benefit the following stakeholders: - Multilaterals and funders: e.g. FAO, WHO, OIE, World Bank, Asian Development Bank - National policy audience: e.g. government ministries and departments of health, agriculture, and development; non-government agencies - Private sector actors: e.g. pharmaceutical, poultry breeding, and poultry exporting companies - Practitioner and civil society organisations: e.g. farmer cooperatives, veterinarians, consumer groups - Academic audiences How might they benefit from this research? Multilaterals and funders, and national policy makers will be incorporated in the Hub's National Advisory Groups where they will receive updates on research and stakeholder engagement activities on a regular basis. The Hub will communicate policy briefs in consultation with the National Advisory Groups where researchers communicate up-to-date and relevant information in the current international policy making landscape. In addition, Hub researchers will disseminate outputs at international platforms such as multi-stakeholder meetings hosted by the Hub as well as participating in One Health conferences. The Hub will also convene high-level policy fora at national and regional levels, benefitting from the huge experience in this area from FAO, IDS and Chatham House who are in the Hub team. Private sector actors will directly engage with Hub activities through opportunities to support the Flexible Fund. The Fund will be used to strengthen local capacity through research training mobility schemes, further exploitation data generated in the research, and partnership grants. By directly engaging with private sector actors in shaping training, knowledge, and partnership, the Hub will be feed its research outputs into challenges and opportunities in the private sector and influence their behaviours to improve poultry production and trade. Doing so also contributes to establishing national, regional, and international networks of researchers, policy makers and private sector actors as outlined in our Theory of Change. The Hub's Impact, Communication and Engagement (ICE) strategies will make extensive use of social media and digital communication platforms to reach practitioner and civil society organisations. This will be built into already-existing networks established and engaged by in-country partners. For example, TANUVAS has experiences in utilising WhatsApp group chats and YouTube channels to reach thousands of farmers in disseminating research findings about livestock management techniques in Tamil Nadu, India. The Hub will adopt these innovative approaches that are proven successful in the study sites and also facilitate co-learning across multiple sites where the Hub will conduct research and engagement activities. These best practices will be featured on the Hub's website and shared in its newsletters and blog series to reach a wider audience across the world. The Hub will benefit from the outreach of IDS based communication platforms (e.g. STEPS Centre) with more than 3,000 subscribers. The Hub will benefit the academic audience in multiple ways. As interdisciplinary working is core to the Hub's activities, participating researchers will have the opportunity to engage in research beyond their own disciplines through meetings and workshops organised by the Hub. The Hub's research outputs will be published in peer-reviewed journals across natural and social sciences, and will be presented at workshops and conferences in social, veterinary, and biological sciences. Finally, the Hub conference in the final year will pool all findings from the five years of research in all scientific fields, attracting academic professionals working in One Health across the world.
Committee Not funded via Committee
Research TopicsAnimal Health, Microbiology
Research PriorityX – Research Priority information not available
Research Initiative GCRF Interdisciplinary Research Hubs (GCRF IRH) [2018]
Funding SchemeX – not Funded via a specific Funding Scheme
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