Developing the Strategy – the past and the future
The past
The Surveillance Strategy has been in
development since 2006, and it continues to be updated and
evolve. Some earlier versions of the Strategy have been
considered by the JNCC Committee and other groups.
The earliest version of the surveillance
strategy was included in the March 2006 JNCC Committee paper, which
also deals with a strategy for reporting and research. This
paper contained the first breakdown of the surveillance framework
into three objectives. However, the surveillance section of
this paper (including the three objectives) has been fully
superseded by the Surveillance Strategy (July 2008 version).
The paper is still useful for showing the links between
surveillance, reporting and research, and includes Appendix 1
on national and international surveillance
obligations.
A later version of the Strategy was discussed
as a March 2008 JNCC Committee paper.
A short version of the Strategy was discussed by the UK
Biodiversity Standing Committee, as the April 2008 strategy paper. Both
of these papers have been superseded by the Surveillance Strategy (July 2008 version) .
The future
The three surveillance objectives set
out in the Surveillance Framework attempt to provide a
logical framework for assessing the coverage and relevance of
surveillance activities. Within this framework, most policy
questions which rely on surveillance evidence will find appropriate
information. The framework needs to be broad enough for the
evidence needs of new and evolving areas of policy. To
develop understanding of the framework, JNCC produced a Discussion Paper on the Surveillance
Rationale, which looks at how some other countries have
considered surveillance, and how surveillance requirements can be
assessed. This paper led to the production of the Assessment of the Surveillance
Rationale and Objectives, which includes suggestions for
further developing:
This development work will be gradual, and
will feed through to a number of the Surveillance Strategy
documents.
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