Soare Cristina, Garcia-Ara Amelia, Seguino Alessandro, Uys Matthys, Thomas Lian F
The Royal (Dick) School of Veterinary Studies, University of Edinburgh, Midlothian, United Kingdom.
School of Veterinary Medicine and Science, University of Nottingham, Nottingham, United Kingdom.
Front Vet Sci. 2022 Feb 9;8:794257. doi: 10.3389/fvets.2021.794257. eCollection 2021.
Interventions to control or eradicate neglected zoonoses are generally paid for through the public purse and when these interventions focus on the animal hosts, they are often expected to be performed and financed through the state veterinary service. The benefits of control, however, accrue across the human, animal, and environmental spaces and enhance both public and private interests. Additionally, disease control interventions do not take place in a vacuum and the indirect impacts of our actions should also be considered if the societal benefit of interventions is to be maximised. With the caveat that unintended consequences can and will occur, pre-identifying potential synergies and trade-offs in our disease control initiatives allows for them to be considered in intervention design and monitored during programme roll-out. In this paper, using a One Health approach with the example of control, we identify potential indirect impacts which may arise and how these may influence both our choice of intervention and opportunities to optimise the animal, environmental, and societal benefits of control through maximising synergies and minimising trade-offs.
控制或根除被忽视的人畜共患病的干预措施通常由公共资金支付,当这些干预措施侧重于动物宿主时,通常期望通过国家兽医服务机构来实施和资助。然而,控制的好处会在人类、动物和环境领域产生,并增进公共和私人利益。此外,疾病控制干预并非在真空中进行,如果要使干预措施的社会效益最大化,还应考虑我们行动的间接影响。尽管可能会且将会出现意想不到的后果,但预先确定我们疾病控制举措中的潜在协同效应和权衡取舍,能够使其在干预设计中得到考虑,并在项目实施过程中受到监测。在本文中,我们以控制为例,采用“同一健康”方法,确定可能出现的潜在间接影响,以及这些影响如何可能影响我们对干预措施的选择,以及通过最大化协同效应和最小化权衡取舍来优化动物、环境和控制的社会效益的机会。