WHA administers the national electronic Wildlife Health Information System (eWHIS) database, a web-enabled, secure database capturing information relating to wildlife health surveillance and disease investigation in Australia.
WHA receives wildlife health data from sources both within governments (including state and territory agricultural, environment and health agencies) and from sources outside of governments (such as university veterinary clinics and pathology departments, zoo wildlife hospitals and private veterinary practitioners). Other sources include the Australian Registry of Wildlife Health, specific targeted projects such as the avian influenza wild bird surveillance program, and national datasets such as Australian Bat Lyssavirus (ABLV) testing. WHA collates and moderates the data in eWHIS to ensure that it is as accurate as possible.
Specific components of Australia's wildlife health surveillance system that contribute data to eWHIS include the WHA Coordinator Group and the Sentinel Surveillance Program (zoos, veterinary clinics and universities).
The over-arching purpose of eWHIS is the protection of human health, domestic animal health and biodiversity. Data in eWHIS assists in identification of unusual and emerging wildlife diseases, management of disease outbreaks, development of policy on wildlife disease, and in meeting Australia’s national and international reporting commitments.
Information from eWHIS is used in a variety of outputs. Click here for surveillance reports and publications that have used eWHIS data.