The PREDICT
project is a part of the United States Agency for International
Development's (USAID) Emerging
Pandemic Threats (EPT) program lead by the One Health Institute at the
University of California, Davis, School of Veterinary Medicine in a consortium
with EcoHealth Alliance, Metabiota, Smithsonian Institution and the Wildlife
Conservation Society; focusing on pathogen surveillance, viral discovery
and global health capacity strengthening in more than 20 countries.
USAID initiated the Emerging Pandemic Threats program in 2009 with the
goal of strengthening capacities in developing countries to prevent,
detect, and control infectious diseases. PREDICT, the surveillance and
virus discovery component of the EPT program, focuses on building
capacity to identify potential zoonotic viral threats at high-risk
wildlife-human pathogen transmission interfaces where diseases are most
likely to emerge. More...
The PREDICT
project is a part of the United States Agency for International
Development's (USAID) Emerging
Pandemic Threats (EPT) program lead by the One Health Institute at the
University of California, Davis, School of Veterinary Medicine in a consortium
with EcoHealth Alliance, Metabiota, Smithsonian Institution and the Wildlife
Conservation Society; focusing on pathogen surveillance, viral discovery
and global health capacity strengthening in more than 20 countries.
USAID initiated the Emerging Pandemic Threats program in 2009 with the
goal of strengthening capacities in developing countries to prevent,
detect, and control infectious diseases. PREDICT, the surveillance and
virus discovery component of the EPT program, focuses on building
capacity to identify potential zoonotic viral threats at high-risk
wildlife-human pathogen transmission interfaces where diseases are most
likely to emerge.
The goal is to discover potentially pathogenic viruses before they
emerge from animals into people, and surveillance efforts are focused on
wildlife and domestic animals most likely to serve as reservoirs for
emerging zoonotic viruses (such bats, rodents, and nonhuman primates),
and people, at human-animal interfaces with high-risk potential for
disease transmission. By conducting global surveillance the project
hopes to detect and prevent spillover of pathogens of pandemic potential
that can move between animals and people. Virus detection across
high-risk interfaces for PREDICT was performed using a combination of
consensus polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and high through-put
sequencing (HTS).
Less...