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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Biological threats from a 'One Health' perspective.

Journal:
Revue scientifique et technique (International Office of Epizootics)
Year:
2017
Authors:
Zinsstag, J et al.

Plain-English summary

This paper discusses the importance of a "One Health" approach, which emphasizes the connection between human and animal health, as well as the environment. It highlights how diseases that can spread between animals and humans, as well as those carried by insects, are significant threats, especially in changing social and environmental conditions. The authors point out that contaminated food, water, air, and soil can also spread diseases, making environmental sanitation crucial. They suggest that monitoring health risks and antibiotic resistance together can help reduce these biological threats. The paper concludes by recommending that health assessments be included early in the planning of large development projects to better manage these risks.

Abstract

Biological threats are a prime example of an issue that needs the 'One Health' approach. Such an approach would facilitate the prevention and mitigation of these threats. 'One Health' is defined as any added value in terms of the health of humans and animals, financial savings or environmental services achievable through the cooperation of human and veterinary medicines when compared to the two disciplines working separately. This principle also applies to the involvement of other disciplines from the natural sciences and humanities. This paper is not an exhaustive survey of integrated approaches but discusses concepts and methods and provides key examples of the benefits of a 'One Health' approach when applied to biological threats. Zoonoses and vector-borne diseases (i.e. diseases transmitted between animals and humans and by insect or acarian vectors) remain central biological threats in highly dynamic social and environmental conditions. Such diseases are not always directly transmitted. Contaminated food, water, air and soil represent important sources of transmission for foodborne and environmentally related diseases. Therefore, this paper treats environmental sanitation separately because of the importance of the excreta management of humans and animals. Integrated syndromic surveillance and antimicrobial resistance surveillance link the above aspects and are showcases for a 'One Health' approach to biological threat reduction. Biological threats are not only related to natural conditions but may also be exacerbated by large development projects such as dams, mining and infrastructure. Consequently, it is recommended that the health impact assessment (HIA) approach be implemented as early as the planning stage of any large infrastructure project located in a complex socioecological system. This paper extends the HIA approach to an integrated 'One Health' impact assessment approach.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30152453/