Allen Heather A
Center for Food Security and Public Health, College of Veterinary Medicine, Iowa State University, Ames, IA 50011, USA.
Vet Sci. 2015 May 13;2(2):69-83. doi: 10.3390/vetsci2020069.
The merits of One Health have been thoroughly described in the literature, but how One Health operates in the United States federal system of government is rarely discussed or analyzed. Through a comparative case-study approach, this research explores how federalism, bureaucratic behavior, and institutional design in the United States may influence zoonotic disease outbreak detection and reporting, a key One Health activity. Using theoretical and empirical literature, as well as a survey/interview instrument for individuals directly involved in a past zoonotic disease outbreak, the impacts of governance are discussed. As predicted in the theoretical literature, empirical findings suggest that federalism, institutional design, and bureaucracy may play a role in facilitating or impeding zoonotic disease outbreak detection and reporting. Regulatory differences across states as well as compartmentalization of information within agencies may impede disease detection. However, the impact may not always be negative: bureaucracies can also be adaptive; federalism allows states important opportunities for innovation. While acknowledging there are many other factors that also matter in zoonotic disease detection and reporting, this research is one of the first attempts to raise awareness in the literature and stimulate discussion on the intersection of governance and One Health.
“同一健康”理念的优点在文献中已有详尽描述,但“同一健康”在美国联邦政府体系中如何运作却鲜有讨论或分析。本研究采用比较案例研究方法,探讨美国的联邦制、官僚行为和制度设计如何影响人畜共患病疫情的检测与报告,这是“同一健康”的一项关键活动。通过运用理论和实证文献,以及针对曾直接参与人畜共患病疫情的个人的调查/访谈工具,探讨治理的影响。正如理论文献中所预测的,实证研究结果表明,联邦制、制度设计和官僚体制可能在促进或阻碍人畜共患病疫情的检测与报告方面发挥作用。各州之间的监管差异以及各机构内部信息的分割可能会阻碍疾病检测。然而,这种影响并不总是负面的:官僚体制也具有适应性;联邦制为各州提供了重要的创新机会。虽然承认在人畜共患病检测和报告中还有许多其他重要因素,但本研究是在文献中提高认识并激发关于治理与“同一健康”交叉领域讨论的首批尝试之一。