Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
One Health Priorities: Advancing Veterinary Public Health in Latin America and the Caribbean.
- Journal:
- Pathogens (Basel, Switzerland)
- Year:
- 2024
- Authors:
- Rocha, Felipe et al.
- Affiliation:
- Pan American Center for Foot-and-Mouth Disease and Veterinary Public Health (PANAFTOSA/VPH) · Brazil
Plain-English summary
This study looked at how countries in Latin America and the Caribbean are working together on health issues that affect humans, animals, and the environment, known as One Health. Researchers sent out a survey with 104 questions to government representatives from 32 countries, and they analyzed responses from 17 countries. They found that food safety was considered more important than public policies, and both of these were seen as more significant than programs aimed at controlling diseases that can spread from animals to humans (zoonosis). While communication about food safety was a strong point, preventing foodborne illnesses was seen as a challenge. Overall, the study highlighted that countries are doing well in following international health guidelines, but there are still areas that need improvement, especially in coordinating efforts across different sectors.
Abstract
One Health (OH) is an integrative approach to human, animal, and environmental health and can be used as a comprehensive indicator for comparative purposes. Although an OH index has been proposed for comparing cities, states, and countries, to date, no practical study has compared countries using this approach. Accordingly, this study aimed to assess OH initiatives using a survey with a veterinary public health focus. The questionnaire contained 104 quantitative questions and was sent to representatives of governmental institutions of 32 countries in the Americas. After exclusion criteria were considered, a total of 35 questionnaires from 17 countries were analyzed, with country names remaining undisclosed during the statistical analyses to protect potentially sensitive information. Principal component analysis (PCA) of health parameters in Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC) as a function of country perception (self-vector) showed that food safety was ranked higher than public policies (= 0.009), and that both (= 0.003) were ranked higher than institutional routines related to zoonosis programs. National policies in accordance with international standards, regulations, recommendations, and guidelines was considered the standout topic for public policy, with higher-ranking topics including standard. Meanwhile, challenging topics included tools, preparedness, governance, and research. Food safety showed both strengths and challenges in the coordination of its activities with other sectors. Food safety communication was scored as a strength, while foodborne diseases prevention was ranked as a challenge. Institutional routines for zoonosis maintained both strong and challenging topics in the execution and implementation of attributions and daily routine. Thus, the survey showed that topics such as access to and compliance with international guidelines and intercountry integration were ranked higher than in-country articulation, particularly among food safety, zoonoses, and environmental institutions.
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Search related cases →Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39204310/