Ayobami Olaniyi, Mark Godwin, Kadri-Alabi Zaharat, Achi Chioma Rita, Jacob Joy Chinwendu
Department of Infectious Disease Epidemiology, Robert Koch Institute, Berlin, Germany.
Department of One Health, Royal (Dick) School of Veterinary Studies, The University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, Scotland, UK.
J Egypt Public Health Assoc. 2021 Aug 20;96:26. doi: 10.1186/s42506-021-00085-y. eCollection 2021 Dec.
One Health (OH) has resurfaced in the light of the ravaging COVID-19 pandemic. It has been accepted by many local and global health authorities as a suitable approach for preventing and responding to infectious disease outbreaks including pandemics.
One Health (OH) is a multisectoral and interdisciplinary framework for managing the animal, human, and ecosystem determinants of health. Globally, the majority of emerging infections in humans including SARS-Cov2-the causative agent of COVID-19-are transmitted from animals through environmental contacts in the last few decades. Yet, even when the biological and social interactions at the human, animal, and environmental interface that drive spillover of zoonotic diseases have been proven, OH strategies to address associated complex health challenges today are still rudimentary in many national health systems. Despite the disproportionate burden of infectious diseases in sub-Saharan Africa, OH is minimally incorporated into routine disease control and national health security programs. Challenges include poor policy support for OH in sub-Saharan Africa, and where some form of policy framework does exist, there are significant implementation bottlenecks. In this paper, we identified ideological, technical, operational, and economic barriers to OH implementation in Nigeria and sub-Saharan Africa, and highlighted possible recommendations across these domains. In order to yield sustainable benefits, a relevant OH policy approach in the sub-Saharan African health systems must derive from a buy-in of the critical mass of stakeholders in the society.
The implementation of sustainable OH approaches as a countermeasure to recurring emerging infections is a developmental priority for sub-Saharan African countries. A deep understanding of the local context must be leveraged to develop integrative OH solutions that are bold, rooted in science, and proven to be compatible with the level of development in sub-Saharan Africa.
鉴于肆虐的新冠疫情,“同一健康”(OH)再度受到关注。它已被许多地方和全球卫生当局认可为预防和应对包括大流行在内的传染病暴发的合适方法。
“同一健康”(OH)是一个管理健康的动物、人类和生态系统决定因素的多部门、跨学科框架。在全球范围内,包括新冠病毒(SARS-CoV-2,即COVID-19的病原体)在内,过去几十年中大多数新发人类感染都是通过环境接触从动物传播而来。然而,即使驱动人畜共患病溢出的人类、动物和环境界面的生物和社会相互作用已得到证实,但如今在许多国家卫生系统中,应对相关复杂健康挑战的“同一健康”策略仍很初级。尽管撒哈拉以南非洲地区传染病负担过重,但“同一健康”在日常疾病控制和国家卫生安全计划中的纳入程度极低。挑战包括撒哈拉以南非洲地区对“同一健康”的政策支持不足,而且即使存在某种形式的政策框架,也存在重大实施瓶颈。在本文中,我们确定了尼日利亚和撒哈拉以南非洲地区实施“同一健康”的思想、技术、操作和经济障碍,并强调了这些领域的可能建议。为了产生可持续效益,撒哈拉以南非洲卫生系统中相关的“同一健康”政策方法必须源自社会中关键多数利益相关者的认同。
实施可持续的“同一健康”方法作为应对反复出现的新发感染的对策,是撒哈拉以南非洲国家的发展优先事项。必须利用对当地情况的深入了解,制定大胆、基于科学且经证实与撒哈拉以南非洲发展水平相适应的综合“同一健康”解决方案。