Por favor espere mientras carga su Bulletin

Newsletter INFORMACIÓN CONTINUAEnhancing veterinary laboratory capacity in COVID-19’s wake through the first-ever virtual OIE PVS mission

INFORMACIÓN CONTINUA Publicado en 2021-09-30 07:42:35

Enhancing veterinary laboratory capacity in COVID-19’s wake through the first-ever virtual OIE PVS mission

Leer

Tamaño de fuente - A A A +

The COVID-19 pandemic has marked a challenging but breakthrough moment for science, research and society at large. A cornerstone of human and animal health systems, laboratories across the world have seen the continuity of their operations put to the test. Their significant engagement to enhance capacity, to conduct research and to put equipment and expertise at the disposal of the larger health system, often meant that only critical diagnostic laboratory functions were maintained and ramped up, while other types of activities had to take a back seat. Travel restrictions made access to laboratory facilities limited or nearly impossible for external stakeholders, and essential quality assurance activities, such as audits and technical training, became difficult to implement. Among these challenges was the implementation of in-country missions by the World Organisation for Animal Health (OIE).

 The OIE, however, was prompt to react and adapt its flagship capacity building programme, called the Performance of Veterinary Services (PVS) Pathway. With a voluntary, country-centric approach and targeted support lying at its heart, the programme has provided independent expertise to national Veterinary Services in more than 140 countries over the last decade. Carried out remotely in Liberia earlier this year, the latest PVS Sustainable Laboratories mission sets itself apart as an example of the Organisation’s adaptation to the COVID-19 disruption. This remote initiative revealed opportunities for increased flexibility and possibilities for innovation in veterinary laboratories through new delivery modalities.

Making the digital leap: challenges and opportunities

To propose a 100% virtual mission to Liberia, the OIE undertook a risk analysis to identify the critical success factors for this new kind of activity. After the methodology and tools were adapted, the mission was ready to begin.

The initiative took off in Liberia’s Leon Quist Ledlum Central Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory in January 2021. Being the only lab in the West African country, the facility has been playing a key role and it now aims to increase its capacity to conduct more animal health surveillance programmes at a national level.

A series of webinars were organised over a three-month period on three different aspects: data collection, resource modelling and the preparation of a mission report. Like for all similar missions, the team was made up of OIE-trained internationally renowned experts. Despite the new format, the mission’s objectives remained unchanged: to identify physical, human and economic resources needed by the country’s veterinary laboratory system, evaluate its performance within the broader national landscape, and present insight to the national Veterinary Services to support their decision-making process with resource allocation and help them keep risks in check.

The lack of in-person engagement was overwhelmingly perceived as the highest risk attached to this delivery modality. Initial concerns, however, were mitigated by the positive outcomes seen at an early stage: a greater amount of time to collect data, faster analyses, high-quality data visualisations thanks to improved digital tools. For Dr Ana Maria Nicola, Leader of the Liberia Mission Expert Team and Director of SENASA Veterinary Laboratories in Argentina, the data collection phase with more focused assistance from the PVS Experts enhanced the impact of the mission, the understanding of its objectives and the overall quantity and quality of data to support expertise and analysis.

But while technology acted as a key enabler, it also proved a constraint. Internet penetration in the African country currently stands at 19%. The laboratory landscape mirrors the country’s digital divide, which was further exacerbated by the pandemic: the lack of access to internet and hardware by most participants limited interactions with staff, making it hard for all participants to fully benefit from the online process. Despite frequent attempts to encourage active participation, ensuring a genuinely inclusive environment was not always an easy feat.

Another stumbling block was understanding the laboratory’s current context. The shift to the virtual modality required a change of mindset: operating at a distance lacks direct observations and valuable hands-on exposure to facilities along with the opportunity to appreciate its underlying features and capacities. In most cases, the operating environment had to be imagined based on staff declarations. Dr David Korcal, Team Member and Quality Assurance Manager at the Diagnostic Laboratory for Population and Animal Health in Michigan (United States of America), argues: ‘The idea of laboratory operations was formed through pictures and descriptions which were gathered over time. We had to be careful not to be too quick to form opinions without all the facts.All declarations made by the beneficiaries needed to be followed up, documented and confirmed, which added a layer of complexity to the mission. Dr Ana Maria Nicola echoes the statement, adding that declarations may paint a partial picture of the activities, but they cannot cover the whole context and workflow of laboratories – two components that are critical for putting them under the microscope.

A future-proof approach

The lessons learnt from this first-ever virtual PVS Pathway mission are plentiful: more effective preparation and better methodology, higher flexibility and continuity of the project activities under severe conditions, just to name a few. By applying the OIE guiding principles of scientific expertise and commitment to stepping up global health management, capacity building efforts under the PVS Pathway framework have proved successful in delivering value to beneficiaries. ‘The personnel were very enthusiastic about the mission engagement,’ claims Laboratory Director Dr Watta Anthony. ‘I must admit that the mission has made a significant impact on our thinking and management skills.’

Importantly, the virtual mission points to a way forward with digital tools and collaboration playing an important role. This technology-driven vision also fits into the broader objectives of the OIE 7th Strategic Plan, and specifically the commitment to tap into the potential of data. ‘The digitalised PVS Pathway offered to Liberia by the OIE Mission was well received,’ comments Dr Joseph Anderson, OIE Liberia Delegate and Director of Livestock in the Veterinary Services Department of Animal Health Services Ministry of Agriculture in the country.

‘I personally learnt a lot of useful details from the mission and colleagues about the process that will make our laboratory very functional and sustainable.’

However, although the positive outlook bodes well for the future, a 100% remote format may only partially suit roll out on a large scale. Assessing both the challenges and impacts of practices implemented as a result of COVID-19 has been key to finding an equitable formula where the OIE can improve results for Members, experts, and resource partners alike. Because they combine web-based activities and face-to-face interactions, blended missions seem to be well-positioned to fulfil this need with their dual nature: they hold the most potential to increase efficiency, ensure accountability and cut cost, while also engaging countries’ participation earlier and more effectively.

Restrictions on cross-border movements are likely to remain in place over the coming months. This means that a fully virtual delivery will be embraced for upcoming OIE PVS Sustainable laboratories missions. The experience with Liberia, however, is certainly one to remember as a new milestone in the history of the OIE: by informing the development of other PVS Pathway missions, it will fuel wins for the future and inspire hybrid ways for the Organisation to respond to rising challenges and see its activities thrive in an increasingly interconnected world.

OIE News – September 2021

Información relacionada al artículo

  • 26min

    Advancing Community Animal Health Workers

  • 38min

    A New WOAH Director General with a Clear and Ambitious Vision

  • 155min

    A Word from our New Reference Centres

  • 33min

    WOAH’s First Transregional Gender Kiosk Promotes Inclusion

  • 38min

    Updating International Standards for Equine Encephalitides

  • 26min

    Engaging Minds: Veterinarian and Public Health Laboratory Experts from the Mediterranean Team Up in the ALERT Game

  • 16min

    ‘Songyue’: Koi Carp Artwork Gifted to WOAH’s Aquatic Commission

  • 26min

    WOAH Celebrates its Centenary by Promoting its Archives

  • 18min

    Global Launch of the PVS Pathway Information System

  • 13min

    Progress Report on the External Review of WOAH's Basic Texts

  • 13min

    Introducing the Disease Status Management Platform

  • 6min

    Launching the Scientific Watch Bulletin on Rabies

  • 10min

    Upcoming Aquaculture Training Course

  • 38min

    On WOAH's Specialist Commissions

  • 16min

    Never Let a Foresight Scenario Go to Waste

  • 26min

    Advancing the WOAH Strategy Against Antimicrobial Resistance

  • 19min

    Members Experience the PVS Information System for the First Time

  • 22min

    Guidelines for Community Animal Health Workers

  • 8min

    Barriers and Solutions to Mass Dog Vaccination for Rabies

  • 20min

    Private Sector Collaboration for Animal Health and Welfare Standards

  • 16min

    PVS Information System Hits Key Training Milestone on Path to Global Launch

  • 30min

    Exploring Changes: Crafting Compelling Future Stories

  • 7min

    OFFLU-AIM Project Facilitates Effective Avian Influenza Vaccination Programmes

  • 17min

    Engagement, Collaboration, Cooperation and Transparency to Protect Animal Health Worldwide

  • 19min

    One Health Collaboration, Sustainability of Veterinary Services and Regional Investment

  • 15min

    Launch of the 100th Anniversary Participatory Foresight Project!

  • 28min

    The STAR-IDAZ Research Community Grows

  • 1min

    Anuncio de la Directora General de la OMSA

  • 18min

    The Performance of Veterinary Services Information System Enters its Next Phase of Development

  • 8min

    Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy Surveillance Guidelines: Now Available Online

  • 5min

    Homenaje a la Dra. Christianne Bruschke

  • 45min

    Identifying Priorities Related to Gender in the Animal Health Sector

  • 22min

    Number of Women Veterinarians in South-East Asia Continues to Grow

  • 17min

    We Asked and They Shared: WOAH’s Resource Partners on Working with WOAH

  • 45min

    A Word from Our New Reference Centres

  • 34min

    How is the Future Going? Monitoring Future Scenarios in Animal Health

  • 7min

    UNESCO's Futures Literacy Laboratory Playbook Highlights WOAH

  • 12min

    Easier Access to Previous Editions of WOAH Codes

  • 42min

    Immersing WOAH’s New Delegates in their Roles

  • 9min

    Self-Declarations: Improved Templates and Data Presentation

  • 18min

    Thinking About the Futures of Emergency Management

  • 25min

    Embracing Uncertainty - Using Strategic Foresight Methods to Support Decision-Making

  • 16min

    The Power of Public-Private Partnerships – an Australian Example

  • 30min

    First Oral Rabies Vaccine for Dogs

  • 7min

    China Establishes an Equine Disease Free Zone for the Upcoming 19th Asian Games

  • 11min

    Animal Health and the Transformation of Food Systems

  • 17min

    A Record Year in Review for the WOAH World Fund

  • 15min

    The Futures of Climate Responses, 2040

  • 22min

    Exploring the Futures of Collaboration, Partnerships and Multilateralism

  • 15min

    A Risk-Based Insurance Model for Transboundary Animal Diseases

  • 20min

    A Multi-Agency Simulation Exercise: Building Biological Threat Reduction Capacities

  • 14min

    Tracking Antimicrobial Resistance Control on a Global Scale Through Country Self-Assessment Surveys—TrACSS

  • 10min

    New access point to previous editions of the Terrestrial Animal Health Code

  • 23min

    Nature for Health Trust Fund Seeks Country Partners

  • 13min

    Multidisciplinary Project Examines Australia’s One Health Pandemic Governance

  • 24min

    Entender y definir mejor el papel de los promotores pecuarios como parte del fortalecimiento de los Servicios Veterinarios de primera línea

  • 31min

    What is the Observatory?

  • 47min

    Destination 2040 - there and back through the OIE Futures Literacy Laboratory

  • 17min

    The OIE holds its 16th annual World Fund Advisory Committee Meeting

  • 11min

    The World Organisation for Animal Health launches a database on public—private partnerships in the veterinary domain

  • 20min

    Competent and well-equipped Veterinary Services in support of national health systems: the OIE contribution

  • 24min

    Exploring how futures are imagined and used: unleashing the potential of Foresight and Futures Literacy

  • 10min

    OIE Tool for the Evaluation of Performance of Aquatic Animal Health Services (PVS Tool - Aquatic), 2nd edition

  • 6min

    New suppliers selected for the OIE Rabies Vaccine Bank

  • 9min

    New suppliers selected for the OIE PPR Vaccine Bank

  • 13min

    Lessons learnt series on veterinary paraprofessionals

  • 14min

    Keeping our institutional meetings despite the virtual environment

  • 13min

    Electronic sanitary certificates for safe international trade in animals and animal products

  • 6min

    Discover the new OIE Documentary Portal

  • 12min

    Moving forward on the Global Burden of Animal Diseases (GBADs) Programme

  • 28min

    Virtual interviews as an alternative to field missions? Lessons learnt from a pilot experience

  • 29min

    Enhancing veterinary laboratory capacity in COVID-19’s wake through the first-ever virtual OIE PVS mission

  • 14min

    The third OIE Animal Welfare Global Forum

  • 26min

    Current state and future of small companion animal practice in Africa

  • 24min

    The OIE World Fund: 2020 financial performance

  • 15min

    A Standard Operating Procedure to improve notification of emerging diseases of terrestrial animals

  • 15min

    The OIE Aquatic Animals Commission furthers aquatic animal health globally and delivers substantial achievements during its last term

  • 23min

    The digital archive of the OIE Bulletin from 1927 to 1982 is now available on the Documentary Portal

  • 23min

    Global report indicates decreasing trend in antimicrobials intended for use in the animal sector

  • 35min

    How disease control and animal health services can impact antimicrobial resistance. A retrospective country case study of Sweden

  • 34min

    Reflections on the Foot-and-Mouth Disease Epidemic of 2001: a United Kingdom Perspective

  • 46min

    Reflections on the Foot-and-Mouth Disease Epidemic of 2001: an Irish Perspective

  • 7min

    Safe Trade and FMD Control Training Course

  • 15min

    STAR-IDAZ International Research Consortium on Animal Health Releases a State-of-the-Art Report on Priority Animal Diseases

  • 17min

    OIE PVS Pathway missions go virtual!

  • 31min

    100-year anniversary of the origin of the OIE at the 1921 Paris International Conference

  • 23min

    First workshop of the OIE Twinning Network on Viral Haemorrhagic Fevers in West and Central Africa

  • 14min

    Taking a closer look at the 15th OIE World Fund Advisory Committee Meeting

  • 13min

    The OIE and the University of Liverpool host the launch of the Global Burden of Animal Diseases (GBADs) Programme

  • 13min

    Global leaders meet to elevate sustainable political support for antimicrobial resistance issue

  • 24min

    News from the OIE Laboratory Twinning Programme

  • 49min

    Veterinary workforce development: the relevance of skill qualification, education and occupational frameworks

  • 12min

    Assessing the risks of zoonotic diseases under the One Health approach: a new tripartite operational tool

  • 4min

    G20 statement

  • 112min

    Overcoming the impact of COVID-19 on animal welfare:
    COVID-19 Thematic Platform on Animal Welfare

  • 34min

    Twinning is winning

  • 42min

    Global Burden of Animal Diseases – building a community of practice for animal health economics

  • 7min

    Identifying and testing suitable and safe aircraft disinfectants for use on cargo planes that transport animals

  • 7min

    Los Directores Generales de la FAO y la OIE intercambian sus impresiones sobre la colaboración entre las dos organizaciones

  • 15min

    Applying Big Data solutions to One Health challenges in the Mediterranean region

  • 8min

    Namibia’s demonstration of freedom from bovine tuberculosis

  • 10min

    Triage in the trenches, for the love of animals

  • 21min

    Global Strategic Plan to end human deaths from dog-mediated rabies by 2030

  • 22min

    OIE rabies international standards: towards ‘Zero by 30’

  • 19min

    The OIE Rabies Vaccine Bank: a possible tool for outbreak response

  • 8min

    Epidemiological survey of bovine viral diarrhoea in dairy cattle in Nepal

  • 3min

    LSD: a new challenge to the Veterinary Services of Central Asian countries

  • 15min

    Improving sustainability to avoid laboratory disasters

  • 2min

    On the frontlines of rabies eradication