Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Practice of One Health approaches: bridges and barriers in Tanzania.
- Journal:
- The Onderstepoort journal of veterinary research
- Year:
- 2014
- Authors:
- Kayunze, Kim A et al.
- Affiliation:
- Sokoine University of Agriculture
Plain-English summary
In Tanzania, researchers looked at how human and animal health experts work together to tackle health issues that affect both people and animals. They found that only a small number of animal health officers had teamed up with medical officers, and even fewer wildlife officers had worked with animal health experts. The main reasons that helped these experts collaborate included support from higher authorities, serious diseases that can spread between animals and humans, and available funding. However, they faced challenges like a lack of knowledge about each other's fields, limited networking opportunities, and no clear plans for working together. The study highlights the need to overcome these challenges to improve cooperation in managing health risks from infectious diseases.
Abstract
The practice of one health approaches in human and animal health programmes is influenced by type and scope of bridges and barriers for partnerships. It was thus essential to evaluate the nature and scope of collaborative arrangements among human, animal, and wildlife health experts in dealing with health challenges which demand inter-sectoral partnership. The nature of collaborative arrangement was assessed, and the respective bridges and barriers over a period of 12 months (July 20011 to June 2012) were identified. The specific objectives were to: (1) determine the proportion of health experts who had collaborated with other experts of disciplines different from theirs, (2) rank the general bridges for and barriers against collaboration according to the views of the health experts, and (3) find the actual bridges for and barriers against collaboration among the health experts interviewed. It was found that 27.0% of animal health officers interviewed had collaborated with medical officers while 12.4% of the medical officers interviewed had collaborated with animal health experts. Only 6.7% of the wildlife officers had collaborated with animal health experts. The main bridges for collaboration were instruction by upper level leaders, zoonotic diseases of serious impacts, and availability of funding. The main barriers for collaboration were lack of knowledge about animal/human health issues, lack of networks for collaboration, and lack of plans to collaborate. This thus calls for the need to curb barriers in order to enhance inter-sectoral collaboration for more effective management of risks attributable to infectious diseases of humans and animals.
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Search related cases →Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/25004794/