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The sero-monitoring of rinderpest throughout Africa. Phase two. Results for 1993. Proceedings of a research co-ordination meeting of the FAO/IAEA/SIDA/OAU/IBAR/PARC co-ordinated research programme

Abstract

1993 has been a significant year for PARC with the initiation of the Global Rinderpest Eradication Programme (GREP) providing a new emphasis in the drive towards the final elimination of rinderpest and its causative virus. For PARC this has culminated in a declaration by Egypt that it will cease vaccination at the beginning of 1994 and a strong commitment by a number of West African countries that they too will cease vaccination during 1994 and make the OIE Declarations of Provisional Freedom from Rinderpest. These significant steps forward in the eradication process would not have been possible without the information and confidence provided by the PARC sero-monitoring network. But even more important has been the clear demonstration that is possible to maintain the routine operation of an epidemiological network providing reliable results for a number of years in over 20 African countries. Such a system is vital if rinderpest is to be eradicated from the region and the bold move of a number of countries to now cease vaccinating is, in part, a testimony to the success of this network. This publication details the 1993 sero-monitoring results on a country to country basis, provides details of the external quality assurance  More>>
Publication Date:
Nov 01, 1994
Product Type:
Conference
Report Number:
IAEA-TECDOC-772; CONF-9311283-
Reference Number:
SCA: 553003; PA: AIX-26:020747; EDB-95:053574; SN: 95001338881
Resource Relation:
Conference: Research co-ordinated meeting on the sero-monitoring of rinderpest throughout Africa. Phase two,Cairo (Egypt),7-11 Nov 1993; Other Information: PBD: Nov 1994
Subject:
60 APPLIED LIFE SCIENCES; CATTLE; VIRAL DISEASES; EPIDEMIOLOGY; MEETINGS; AFRICA; ANTIBODIES; BLOOD SERUM; COMPARATIVE EVALUATIONS; COORDINATED RESEARCH PROGRAMS; DISEASE INCIDENCE; DISEASE RESISTANCE; ENZYME IMMUNOASSAY; IMMUNITY; INOCULATION; LEADING ABSTRACT; VACCINES; 553003; PEST AND DISEASE CONTROL
OSTI ID:
10126924
Research Organizations:
Joint FAO/IAEA Div. of Nuclear Techniques in Food and Agriculture, Vienna (Austria)
Country of Origin:
IAEA
Language:
English
Other Identifying Numbers:
Journal ID: ISSN 1011-4289; Other: ON: DE95618235; TRN: XA9438617020747
Availability:
OSTI; NTIS (US Sales Only); INIS
Submitting Site:
INIS
Size:
239 p.
Announcement Date:
Jul 04, 2005

Citation Formats

None. The sero-monitoring of rinderpest throughout Africa. Phase two. Results for 1993. Proceedings of a research co-ordination meeting of the FAO/IAEA/SIDA/OAU/IBAR/PARC co-ordinated research programme. IAEA: N. p., 1994. Web.
None. The sero-monitoring of rinderpest throughout Africa. Phase two. Results for 1993. Proceedings of a research co-ordination meeting of the FAO/IAEA/SIDA/OAU/IBAR/PARC co-ordinated research programme. IAEA.
None. 1994. "The sero-monitoring of rinderpest throughout Africa. Phase two. Results for 1993. Proceedings of a research co-ordination meeting of the FAO/IAEA/SIDA/OAU/IBAR/PARC co-ordinated research programme." IAEA.
@misc{etde_10126924,
title = {The sero-monitoring of rinderpest throughout Africa. Phase two. Results for 1993. Proceedings of a research co-ordination meeting of the FAO/IAEA/SIDA/OAU/IBAR/PARC co-ordinated research programme}
author = {None}
abstractNote = {1993 has been a significant year for PARC with the initiation of the Global Rinderpest Eradication Programme (GREP) providing a new emphasis in the drive towards the final elimination of rinderpest and its causative virus. For PARC this has culminated in a declaration by Egypt that it will cease vaccination at the beginning of 1994 and a strong commitment by a number of West African countries that they too will cease vaccination during 1994 and make the OIE Declarations of Provisional Freedom from Rinderpest. These significant steps forward in the eradication process would not have been possible without the information and confidence provided by the PARC sero-monitoring network. But even more important has been the clear demonstration that is possible to maintain the routine operation of an epidemiological network providing reliable results for a number of years in over 20 African countries. Such a system is vital if rinderpest is to be eradicated from the region and the bold move of a number of countries to now cease vaccinating is, in part, a testimony to the success of this network. This publication details the 1993 sero-monitoring results on a country to country basis, provides details of the external quality assurance programme and provides a series of conclusions and recommendations on the way to proceed in the future for this surveillance network. Refs, figs and tabs.}
place = {IAEA}
year = {1994}
month = {Nov}
}