Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
The World Organisation for Animal Health - current and potential roles in safe international trade of bees and other insects.
- Journal:
- Revue scientifique et technique (International Office of Epizootics)
- Year:
- 2022
- Authors:
- Torres, G et al.
Plain-English summary
The World Organisation for Animal Health (WOAH) is an important group that sets standards for animal health and welfare, including for bees and some other insects. They help countries keep track of animal diseases that could spread, but their current guidelines mainly focus on bees and don’t cover other insects that might be traded internationally. This means there are no specific rules to protect animal health when it comes to trading those other insects. The WOAH is looking to expand its guidelines to include recommendations for safely trading insects, which would help ensure better health for animals involved in this trade. Overall, the WOAH aims to play a key role in making sure that international insect trade is safe for animal health.
Abstract
The World Organisation for Animal Health (WOAH, founded as OIE) is the recognised intergovernmental standard-setting organisation for animal health and welfare. The WOAH mandate is to support its members in the prevention of the spread of animal diseases of concern, as listed in the Terrestrial Animal Health Code (Terrestrial Code). Once a disease, infection or infestation is listed, national Veterinary Authorities have the obligation regularly to notify WOAH of the presence or absence of the listed disease. In regard to insects, the scope of the Terrestrial Code limits its recommendations to preserving the health of bees (species of the genus Apis, extended to the genus Bombus and to the stingless bees for one disease). However, it does not include standards to mitigate the potential animal health risks associated with the international trade of other insects. A description of the standard-setting process and a review of the history of the standards for bee health highlight the resources and requirements to expand the scope of the Terrestrial Code to include recommendations for animal health risk mitigation measures for the safety of international trade in insects. Any initiative to develop guidance on insect trade should include WOAH in its role as the sole global standard-setting organisation on animal health and welfare matters. This aligns with the WOAH commitment to a One Health approach.
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Search related cases →Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35925621/