Preface: Why FRADS
An outbreak of any disease in List
A is potentially catastrophic whether it is a natural outbreak
or an agro- bioterrorist attack. A case in point is the recent outbreak
of Foot and Mouth Disease in the United
Kingdom in which the OIE
estimated that nearly 6 million animals were destroyed at a cost
between 10.5 - 12.9 billion US dollars.
The rapidly changing face of global education, culture, and philosophy
dictates that major revisions be made in the scope and style of
teaching. Veterinary education is all the more impacted because
of the diversity and comparative nature inherent in all areas of
this complex discipline. According to Gustafson (2002) veterinary
education in the USA is internationally (globally) challenged. A
strategy to address this gap is needed and FRADS is a modest but
vital component of such a strategy. When you ask any veterinarian
interested in international veterinary medicine, you discover that
they may be involved in Heifer Project, Christian Veterinary Mission,
or in Vector Biology and FRADS control, or are training scientists
for USDA, USAID, or FAO in areas pertaining directly or inderectly
to foreign animal diseases. Import regulations on animal products
and some state regulations on notifiable animal diseases (e.g. Illinois)
point to foreign animal diseases.
Many food safety issues
also relate to reportable diseases such as (eg. salmonellosis)
the later are not foreign to USA and do not meet the strick definition
of FRADS. However, they have a global ramifacations and many of
them are important on the differetial diagnostic list (OIE List
A.) of foreign animal diseases. Regrettably, however, there is
paucity of efforts devoted to foreign animal diseases in our curriculum.
Recently, especially after the outbreak of FMD and Mad Cow Disease
in England along with the 9/11 events in USA, many veterinary
and medical schools (see resources section of this web site) have
revamped their foreign animal disease components. We welcome and
encourage this trend, and we hope the effort in this web page
significantly addresses the knowledge gap. Our effort has been
to collate various resources and to facilitate self-education
for farmers,veterinarians, public health workers, and the public
at large. We also hope that individuals looking for international
careers, teaching aids, preparation for certification and board
exams, legislative promotion material, will find these pages resourceful.
We invite the reader to feel free to send any information pertinent
to format, outbreaks, accuracy, referall to various experts, etc.
We will do our best to keep the site well-maintained and updated
as outbreaks occur and are handled.
For operational purposes,
we define FRADS as predominantly foreign to the USA, presenting
with a strikingly different and high morbidity and mortality.
On physical examination or autopsy, lesions that are not commonly
observed in USA are noted. Petichiation, echymoses, bloody diarrhea,
persistent fever, naso-ocular discharge, lameness, lymphadenopathy
may serve as good indicators. History is particularly important
at individual and herd level. Movements within state, country,
or internationally may be helpful hints. Many of the FRADS are
vector-borne. Certain diseases (e.g. Ehrlichiosis) have a historical
link to foreign countries but are now considered endemic in certain
parts of the USA. We have therefore included them here even though
they are not strictly foreign. A number of other diseases have
been included for differential diagnostic reasons even though
they may not nessarily have been seen or classified yet as reportable
diseases in the USA. Coincidentally, many of these diseases are
vector-borne and so much effort has been directed to resources
for highly competent vectors such as ticks, mosquitoes, etc. Please
keep in mind that this definition and scope is for operational
purposes only, relative to the USA.
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