Organising for One Health in a developing country

被引:3
|
作者
Mor, Nachiket [1 ]
机构
[1] Banyan Acad Leadership Mental Hlth, Chennai, India
关键词
One Health; Governance; Public health; Zoonosis;
D O I
10.1016/j.onehlt.2023.100611
中图分类号
R1 [预防医学、卫生学];
学科分类号
1004 ; 120402 ;
摘要
Globally, zoonotic diseases pose an enormous and growing public health challenge, and developing countries like India are at the epicentre of it. Although there is general recognition of this reality, governments around the world have struggled to organise appropriately to respond to it. The widely held view is that organising for One Health requires effective cross-sectoral collaboration, but the prerequisites to enable such collaboration appear almost unattainable. Perhaps an entirely different approach is needed, which is over and above effective collaborations between competing government ministries. The approach would have to recognise that while any organisational response will need to be able to address identified zoonotic diseases and respond effectively to them in times of crises, it would also be required to have the ability to shape the response to megatrends such as climate change, deforestation, and the underlying development models of the country. The paper analyses the success and failures associated with the way in which India, Bangladesh, Kenya, and Rwanda have organised for One Health. It also studies the underlying pathways through which zoonotic spillovers take place, and epidemics gather momentum. Based on these critical analyses, the paper concludes that attempts to build single over-arching units to address these challenges have only been partially effective. Given the scale and complexity of the challenge, it recommends that, even at the risk of duplication and the very real possibility that unaddressed gaps will remain, an approach, which builds multiple sharply focused units, would have a greater chance of success.
引用
收藏
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] VISIT A HEALTH-CENTER IN A DEVELOPING-COUNTRY
    GIBSON, PAG
    MCCLELLAND, A
    BRITISH MEDICAL JOURNAL, 1990, 301 (6759): : 1034 - 1036
  • [32] Patients’ health education and diabetes control in a developing country
    C. E. Ezenwaka
    N. V. Offiah
    Acta Diabetologica, 2003, 40 : 173 - 175
  • [33] Mental health screening in fistula women in a developing country
    Goh, J
    Krause, H
    Sloane, K
    Akhter, S
    NEUROUROLOGY AND URODYNAMICS, 2004, 23 (5-6) : 533 - 534
  • [34] Disaster Management Planning for Health Organizations in a Developing Country
    Seyedin, Hesam
    Ryan, James
    Keshtgar, Mohammed
    JOURNAL OF URBAN PLANNING AND DEVELOPMENT, 2011, 137 (01) : 77 - 81
  • [36] PSYCHOSOCIAL FACTORS RELATED TO HEALTH OUTCOMES IN A DEVELOPING COUNTRY
    Ortiz, M. S.
    Urzua, A.
    Repetto, P.
    Guic, E.
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF BEHAVIORAL MEDICINE, 2016, 23 : S205 - S205
  • [37] Health and Subjective Wellbeing in Algeria: A Developing Country in Transition
    Habib Tiliouine
    Applied Research in Quality of Life, 2009, 4 : 223 - 238
  • [38] One country's journey to interoperability: Tanzania's experience developing and implementing a national health information exchange
    Alpha Nsaghurwe
    Vikas Dwivedi
    Walter Ndesanjo
    Haji Bamsi
    Moses Busiga
    Edwin Nyella
    Japhet Victor Massawe
    Dasha Smith
    Kate Onyejekwe
    Jonathan Metzger
    Patricia Taylor
    BMC Medical Informatics and Decision Making, 21
  • [39] One country's journey to interoperability: Tanzania's experience developing and implementing a national health information exchange
    Nsaghurwe, Alpha
    Dwivedi, Vikas
    Ndesanjo, Walter
    Bamsi, Haji
    Busiga, Moses
    Nyella, Edwin
    Massawe, Japhet Victor
    Smith, Dasha
    Onyejekwe, Kate
    Metzger, Jonathan
    Taylor, Patricia
    BMC MEDICAL INFORMATICS AND DECISION MAKING, 2021, 21 (01)
  • [40] Developing One Health Approaches in India
    Kakkar, Manish
    Abbas, Syed
    ECOHEALTH, 2011, 7 : S106 - S106