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The COVID-19 pandemic and global food security
17/11/20 09:17AM
Mardones, F.O., Rich, K.M., Boden, L.A., Moreno-Switt, A.I., Caipo, M.L., Zimin-Veselkoff, N.A., Abdulaziz, M. and Baltenweck, I. /2020./ Frontiers in Veterinary Science
Abstract/Description
We present scientific perspectives on the impact of the COVID-19
pandemic and global food security. International organizations and
current evidence based on other respiratory viruses suggests COVID-19 is
not a food safety issue, i.e., there is no evidence associating food or
food packaging with the transmission of the virus causing COVID-19
(SARS-CoV-2), yet an abundance of precaution for this exposure route
seems appropriate. The pandemic, however, has had a dramatic impact on
the food system, with direct and indirect consequences on lives and
livelihoods of people, plants, and animals. Given the complexity of the
system at risk, it is likely that some of these consequences are still
to emerge over time. To date, the direct and indirect consequences of
the pandemic have been substantial including restrictions on
agricultural workers, planting, current and future harvests; shifts in
agricultural livelihoods and food availability; food safety; plant and
animal health and animal welfare; human nutrition and health; along with
changes in public policies. All aspects are crucial to food security
that would require “One Health” approaches as the concept may be able to
manage risks in a cost-effective way with cross-sectoral, coordinated
investments in human, environmental, and animal health. Like climate
change, the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic will be most acutely felt
by the poorest and most vulnerable countries and communities.
Ultimately, to prepare for future outbreaks or threats to food systems,
we must take into account the Sustainable Development Goals of the
United Nations and a “Planetary Health” perspective.
Permanent link to cite or share this item: https://hdl.handle.net/10568/110129
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