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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Perspectives on One Health: a survey of national Delegates to the World Organisation for Animal Health, 2012.

Journal:
Revue scientifique et technique (International Office of Epizootics)
Year:
2014
Authors:
Glynn, M K & Brink, N

Plain-English summary

In 2012, the World Organisation for Animal Health (OIE) conducted a survey of 178 national representatives to learn about their views on One Health, which is a collaborative approach to managing diseases that affect both animals and humans. Out of those, 120 delegates from various countries shared their insights, highlighting that diseases like rabies and influenza were top concerns, along with the importance of disease reporting and food safety. They noted challenges in implementing One Health strategies, such as limited resources, difficulties in working together, and insufficient laws and policies. The delegates expressed a desire for more support from the OIE, including training and resources to improve their efforts. Overall, they recognized that successful One Health initiatives require strong partnerships across different sectors.

Abstract

In 2012, the World Organisation for Animal Health (OIE) surveyed all 178 national Delegates to better understand the perceptions and priorities of Veterinary Services with respect to One Health efforts and to guide future work in that area. For the purposes of this survey, the concept or practice of One Health was defined as 'the intersectoral collaborative approach to preventing, detecting, and controlling diseases among animals and humans, including the collaboration among the institutions and systems that support their prevention, detection and control'. A total of 120 OlE Delegates, representing countries from all five OIE regions, responded to the survey. Delegates identified zoonoses, rabies and influenza as high-priority disease areas and disease reporting and food safety as high-priority programme areas for One Health approaches. Veterinary Services participated in joint programmes, involving these priority disease and programme areas, with national intersectoral partners. Delegates reported barriers to implementing One Health approaches, including a lack of resources, the complexity of collaboration, inadequate capacity within their Veterinary Services, and a lack of adequate legislation, policy, guidance and political will for One Health activities. Delegates supported OIE efforts to enhance One Health activities, and requested that the OIE and partners provide technical information and advice and conduct training and capacity-building seminars for One Health. Veterinary Services cannot effectively apply One Health approaches at the national level without effective partnerships across sectors. The OlE can serve as a model for countries by continuing its commitment to these intersectoral partnerships at the international level.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/25707174/