Biosafety and Biosecurity Challenges Facing Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratories in Lower-Middle Income Countries in Southeast Asia: A Case Study ConclusionMethodsResultsDiscussion
Dec 4, 2014Prof Richard Ebright, a US biosafety expert at Rutgers University in New Jersey, who reviewed In one case, scientists were handling anthrax
Dec 4, 2014Some were so serious they ended in legal action. Prof Richard Ebright, a US biosafety expert at Rutgers University in New Jersey, who reviewed.
Acknowledgments
The authors would like to thank Cynthia A.
Allen, Anita L.
Harrell, and Glauce Rumin for reviewing the legislation overviews for United States, Canada and Brazil.
Lysiane Snoeck is acknowledged for her assistance with formatting drafts during the preparation of this review.
Addressing Biosafety and Biosecurity Objectives in Containment
While the objectives are clearly different, it is evident that biosafety and biosecurity are complementary disciplines that benefit from an aligned approach.
It is therefore not surprising that biosafety and biosecurity in containment are often addressed together through a single biorisk management program, ensuring compliance with the requirements.
Are there regulatory frameworks for biosafety and biosecurity in containment?
This review provides an overview of regulatory frameworks for biosafety and biosecurity in containment around the globe, as well as points out overlap with other regulatory frameworks, such as:
the Nagoya Protocol or Plant & Animal Health regulations. Author Contributions
DB and PR co-developed the concept of the manuscript.
DB wrote the first draft of the manuscript.
All authors contributed to manuscript revision, read and approved the submitted version.
Biosafety Objectives
Protecting Workers and the Public Against Hazardous Biological Agents
Biosecurity Objectives
Protection Against Loss, Theft, Misuse, Diversion, or Intentional Release
Conclusion
Although biosafety and biosecurity serve different objectives, they are often addressed together, especially in a contained use setting.
This discipline has a long-standing history, predating GMO-focused biosafety approaches, and continues to evolve as new insights and new techniques become available.
The risk assessment and management practices ar.
Introduction
“Biosafety” has multiple accepted definitions depending on the discipline involved (veterinary, food, medical, environmental, or space science), its linguistic roots or even the country in which it is used.
Here are a few examples: • “Safety with respect to the effects of biological research on humans and the environment” (Merriam-Webster, 2019). •.
What are the biosafety and biosecurity issues in 2020?
This together with a massive growth in testing demand resulted in a series of biosafety and biosecurity issues.
Especially in the summer months of 2020 many laboratories and new established diagnostic facilities had to expand their capacities swiftly, often facing shortages in personal protective equipment and basic laboratory furniture.
What are the three biosafety topics?
Those three topics are biosafety under resource limited conditions, training and communication of COVID-19 biosafety aspects, and biosecurity challenges under pandemic circumstances.