AI Article Synopsis

  • Significant advocacy and support have been provided to South Asian countries since the early 2000s to enhance One Health (OH) approaches, essential for controlling zoonotic diseases in the region.
  • A landscape analysis revealed that only a small portion of zoonotic disease research aligns with OH principles, and there are notable gaps in policy-relevant research and collaboration among sectors.
  • While Bangladesh and Bhutan have made advancements in establishing OH strategies, challenges remain in developing a collaborative culture and providing ongoing support for integrated disease control efforts.

Article Abstract

Introduction: Considerable advocacy, funding, training, and technical support have been provided to South Asian countries to strengthen One Health (OH) collaborative approaches for controlling diseases with global human pandemic potential since the early 2000s. It is essential that the OH approach continues to be strengthened given South Asia is a hot spot for emerging and endemic zoonotic diseases. The objectives of this article are to describe OH research and training and capacity building activities and the important developments in government support for OH in these countries to identify current achievements and gaps.

Materials And Methods: A landscape analysis of OH research, training, and government support in South Asia was generated by searching peer-reviewed and grey literature for OH research publications and reports, a questionnaire survey of people potentially engaged in OH research in South Asia and the authors' professional networks.

Results: Only a small proportion of zoonotic disease research conducted in South Asia can be described as truly OH, with a significant lack of OH policy-relevant research. A small number of multisectoral OH research and OH capacity building programmes were conducted in the region. The governments of Bangladesh and Bhutan have established operational OH strategies, with variable progress institutionalising OH in other countries. Identified gaps were a lack of useful scientific information and of a collaborative culture for formulating and implementing integrated zoonotic disease control policies and the need for ongoing support for transdisciplinary OH research and policy-relevant capacity building programmes.

Discussion: Overall we found a very small number of truly OH research and capacity building programmes in South Asia. Even though significant progress has been made in institutionalising OH in some South Asian countries, further behavioural, attitudinal, and institutional changes are required to strengthen OH research and training and implementation of sustainably effective integrated zoonotic disease control policies.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5131453PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3402/iee.v6.33842DOI Listing

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