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OIE PVS Pathway
3rd Meeting of GHSA Zoonotic Diseases Action Package 29-30 August, 2017, Da Nang
The PVS Pathway
Principles
The OIE PVS Pathway is a continuous process aiming to sustainablyimprove the compliance of Veterinary Services with internationalstandards
External independent processExperts trained and certified by the OIEBased on facts & evidence, not impressions
Official request from OIE National Delegate => missions areimplemented on a voluntary basis
Purpose:Assess compliance with OIE standardsIdentify strengths / weaknesses and areas for improvements
Not an audit
Report = country property (confidentiality of results, unless agreeddifferently)
OIE international standards
OIE international standards, guidelines and recommendations for animal health (including zoonoses) and for laboratories
OIE PVS Tool
A tool for the Good Governance of Veterinary Services / Aquatic Animal Health Services
Section 3Quality of Veterinary Services
Quality of Aquatic Animal Health Services
State of implementation
PVS Evaluation
OIE PVS Evaluation
4 fundamental components
Human,Physical,Financial
Resources
Technical Authority
andCapability
Interactionwith
InterestedParties
Market Access Critical
competencies(6 - 18)
47 in total
5 levels of advancement
OIE PVS Evaluation – Vet laboratory diagnosis II-1 Veterinary laboratory diagnosis
A. Access to veterinary laboratory diagnosis
The authority and capability of the VS to have access
to laboratory diagnosis in order to identify and record
pathogenic agents, including those relevant for public
health, that can adversely affect animals and animal
products.
Levels of advancement
1. Disease diagnosis is almost always conducted by clinical means only, with no access to and use of a laboratory to obtain a correct diagnosis
2. For major zoonoses and diseases of national economic importance, the VS have access to and use a laboratory to obtain a correct diagnosis.
3. For other zoonoses and diseases present in the country, the VS have access to and use a laboratory to obtain a correct diagnosis.
4. For diseases of zoonotic or economic importance not present in the country, but known to exist in the region and/ or that could enter the country, the VS have access to and use a laboratory to obtain a correct diagnosis.
5. In the case of new and emerging diseases in the region or world, the VS have access to and use a network of national or international reference laboratories (e.g. an OIE Reference Laboratory) to obtain a correct diagnosis.
PVS Evaluation – Terrestrial28 August 2017
Mission completedMission requested Report Available Special approach
PVS Gap Analysis
PVS Gap Analysis (PVS Costing Tool)
To determine and confirm country’s VS priorities
To determine activities to be carried out to achieve the expected results
Develop an indicative costing of the human and physical resources required for the effective and efficient implementation of the activities defined
To support the preparation of national investment programmes
PVS Gap Analysis28 August 2017
Mission completedMission requested Report Available
The PVS Pathway
PVS Follow-up Mission
PVS Evaluation Follow-Up
Initial country PVS Evaluation = baseline
Regular country PVS Evaluation missions are useful toassess, monitor and accompany progress made:
change in legislation,Modifications in structure – chain of commandImpact of national and international investmentsImproved compliance with OIE standards, etc.
Every [3 to 5] years
Self-evaluation is also possible
PVS Evaluation Follow-Up28 August 2017
Mission requested Mission completed Report Available
OIE PVS Pathway in South-East Asia
Country
Brunei
OIE PVS OIE PVS OIE PVS OIE PVS OIE specific PVS OIE Twinning Evaluation Evaluation Gap Analysis Legislation Follow-up ProjectFollow-up Jun 2008 Jun 2013 - - - -
Cambodia Jul 2007 Jan 2011 Jun 2007 - - -
Indonesia Oct 2010/Apr 2007 - - Lab twinningJul 2011
Lao PDR Mar 2007 Jun 2012 Jan 2012 Aug 2011 PVS Lab (May 2012) -
Malaysia Feb 2016 - - - - Lab twinning
Myanmar Oct 2009 Dec 2010 - Jan 2015 PVS Lab (Mar 2016) -
PVS Aquatic,
Philippines One Health (Sep 2012),May 2008 Jul 2010 - Nov 2016 -PVS Aquatic Gap Analysis (Jan 2016)
Singapore PVS tool training, - - - - -Nov 2014
Thailand Lab twinningMar 2012 Jan 2014 - - - VEE twinning
Timor-Leste Aug 2011 Sep 2014 - - - -
Vietnam Aug 2009/ PVS Evaluation Follow-up Lab twinningOct 2006 Jun 2010 Mar 2010Nov 2011 on Aquatic (Nov 2015) VEE twinning
Support to IHR’s implementation
Synergies and bridges: WHO-IHR / OIE-PVSOIE and WHO:
global institutions responsible for animal and human health intergovernmental standards and
strengthening disease surveillance, early detection, reporting and rapid response capacity
Assessment tools and bridges
Identification of synergies and opportunities:
Mapping of overlapping and of specific outcomes of OIE PVS & WHO IHRPVS Gap Analysis (PVS Costing Tool) – IHR Costing ToolPVS Laboratory Tool – IHR Laboratory Assessment ToolImplementation of joint OIE/WHO workshops in countries at regional level Increased awareness of existing tools (observers in missions and specific trainings)
WHO-OIE Operational Framework for Good Governance at the human-animal interface
• Published on October 2014
• Identification of synergiesand opportunities in theintersectoral collaboration
• An important contribution tothe One Health initiative andthe implementation of theTripartite (WHO-OIE-FAO)Agreement
NATIONAL WORKSHOPCountry perspectives on IHR/PVS assessments and roadmap for better
intersectoral collaboration among animal and human health sectors28–29 January, 2014, Baku, Azerbaijan
NATIONAL WORKSHOPCountry perspectives on IHR/PVS assessments and roadmap for better
intersectoral collaboration among animal and human health sectors26-27 March 2014, Bangkok,Thailand
OIE PVS Pathway 10th Anniversary
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iymtiMQjXJE
Donors and Partners – OIE World Fund
Thank you for you attention!
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