| Literature DB >> 32836843 |
Romain Espinosa1, Damian Tago2, Nicolas Treich3.
Abstract
Most infectious diseases in humans originate from animals. In this paper, we explore the role of animal farming and meat consumption in the emergence and amplification of infectious diseases. First, we discuss how meat production increases epidemic risks, either directly through increased contact with wild and farmed animals or indirectly through its impact on the environment (e.g., biodiversity loss, water use, climate change). Traditional food systems such as bushmeat and backyard farming increase the risks of disease transmission from wild animals, while intensive farming amplifies the impact of the disease due to the high density, genetic proximity, increased immunodeficiency, and live transport of farmed animals. Second, we describe the various direct and indirect costs of animal-based infectious diseases, and in particular, how these diseases can negatively impact the economy and the environment. Last, we discuss policies to reduce the social costs of infectious diseases. While existing regulatory frameworks such as the "One Health" approach focus on increasing farms' biosecurity and emergency preparedness, we emphasize the need to better align stakeholders' incentives and to reduce meat consumption. We discuss in particular the implementation of a "zoonotic" Pigouvian tax, and innovations such as insect-based food or cultured meat. © Springer Nature B.V. 2020.Entities:
Keywords: Biodiversity; Infectious diseases; Intensive farming; Meat consumption; Meat production; Prevention; Regulation; Taxation
Year: 2020 PMID: 32836843 PMCID: PMC7399585 DOI: 10.1007/s10640-020-00484-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Resour Econ (Dordr) ISSN: 0924-6460
Fig. 1Impact of meat consumption and production on infectious disease risks. Semi-intensive/extensive farming shares features of the backyard and the intensive farming methods
Fig. 2Classification of the cost of infectious diseases
Issues, coordination and collaboration needs and expected outcomes of One Health at global, regional, and national levels.
Sources: Based on World Bank (2018) and Barrett and Osofsky (2013)
| Category | Global | Regional | National |
|---|---|---|---|
| Issues affecting: | Many countries across continents | Group of countries geographically close | An individual country |
| Examples of diseases | Pandemics, AMR, zoonotic influenza, rabies, non-zoonotic diseases (foot and mouth disease, peste des petits ruminants) | Ebola, Rift Valley fever, brucellosis, human and animal trypanosomiasis | Neglected zoonotic diseases, ecto/endo parasitic infections, arboviruses (West Nile and other encephalitis, CCH fever) |
| Coordination and collaboration needs | |||
| Geographically | Among all countries in the world | Among countries in the same agro-ecological zones | Among different levels of government (national, provincial, local) within a single country |
| Sectorally | Government agencies, nonprofit and international organizations, academia, research centers, private sector, civil society | ||
| Disciplinary | Human medicine, veterinary medicine, public health, environmental science, ecology, environmental health, conservation, biology, dentistry, nursing, social sciences, humanities, engineering, economics, educations, and public policy | ||
| Expected outcomes | Reduced human morbidity, improved animal welfare, public health protection, financial savings, improved resource efficiency (including time due to rapid information sharing) | ||
Fig. 3Proportion of extensively raised chickens (a) and pigs (b) from Gilbert et al. (2015). Each dot represents a country with the size indicative of their stock of animals. The chicken extensive system follows FAO’s sector 4 definition (village or backyard production with minimal biosecurity), while pig extensive system is characterized as usually unconfined, with typically < 10 pigs, with low biosecurity with little or no health care. The complementary percentage (1-proportion of extensively raised) represents the proportion of animals raised in intensive systems for chickens, and the proportion of animals raised in intensive and semi-intensive systems for pigs
Summary of policy recommendations to regulate meat production (policies 1 and 2) and meat consumption (policies 3 to 5)
| Policy recommendations for developed countries | |
|---|---|
| 1. | Adjusting the compensation for the meat industry to reduce the moral hazard, and in particular to incentivize early reporting of epidemic outbreak |
| 2. | If any, conditioning the subsidies to farms on the production and transportation system (decreasing with the number of farmed and transported animals, decreasing with the genetic proximity, increasing with the use of vaccines, decreasing with the preventive use of antimicrobials) |
| 3. | Implementing a zoonotic tax on animal-based products |
| 4. | Implementing large-scale informational and nudging policies to reduce meat consumption and promote plant-based diets, and reviewing the role of plant-based diets in official nutritional recommendations/guidelines |
| 5. | Subsidizing the development of animal-based food alternatives with lower zoonotic risks (insects, cultured meat) |