Brucellosis and One Health: Inherited and Future Challenges.

Microorganisms

Programa de Investigación en Enfermedades Tropicales, Escuela de Medicina Veterinaria, Universidad Nacional, Heredia 40104, Costa Rica.

Published: August 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • One Health promotes collaboration across various disciplines to improve health outcomes for humans, animals, and the environment, with a focus on the challenges posed by brucellosis.
  • Key stakeholders include public health officials, veterinarians, microbiologists, and breeders, who must work together to enhance awareness and implementation of effective diagnostic and treatment methods.
  • The initiative faces obstacles like climate change, infrastructure weaknesses, and the need for tailored vaccination strategies, emphasizing the importance of building trust and awareness among affected communities.

Article Abstract

One Health is the collaborative efforts of multiple disciplines to attain optimal health for people, animals and the environment, a concept that historically owes much to the study of brucellosis, including recent political and ethical considerations. Brucellosis One Health actors include Public Health and Veterinary Services, microbiologists, medical and veterinary practitioners and breeders. Brucellosis awareness, and the correct use of diagnostic, epidemiological and prophylactic tools is essential. In brucellosis, One Health implementation faces inherited and new challenges, some aggravated by global warming and the intensification of breeding to meet growing food demands. In endemic scenarios, disease awareness, stakeholder sensitization/engagement and the need to build breeder trust are unresolved issues, all made difficult by the protean characteristics of this zoonosis. Extended infrastructural weaknesses, often accentuated by geography and climate, are critically important. Capacity-building faces misconceptions derived from an uncritical adoption of control/eradication strategies applied in countries with suitable means, and requires additional reference laboratories in endemic areas. Challenges for One Health implementation include the lack of research in species other than cattle and small ruminants, the need for a safer small ruminant vaccine, the need to fill in the infrastructure gap, the need for realistic capacity-building, the creation of reference laboratories in critical areas, and the stepwise implementation of measures not directly transposed from the so-called developed countries.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10459711PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/microorganisms11082070DOI Listing

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