Brown Helen Louise, Pursley Isabella Grace, Horton Daniel L, La Ragione Roberto M
School of Biosciences, Cardiff University, Sir Martin Evans Building, Museum Avenue, Cardiff, CF10 3AX, UK.
Department of Comparative Biomedical Sciences, School of Veterinary Medicine, University of Surrey, Daphne Jackson Road, Guildford, GU2 7AL, UK.
One Health Outlook. 2024 Aug 14;6(1):17. doi: 10.1186/s42522-024-00111-x.
One Health (OH) is defined as a unifying approach aiming to sustainably balance and optimise the health of people, animals and the ecosystem. It recognises that the health of humans, animals (both domestic and wild), plants and the wider ecosystem are both interdependent and linked. As a concept, it aims to address complex problems requiring input from multiple disciplines. Suitable issues for OH approaches typically include global issues which can widely impact not only the health of humans and animals, but also have a significant environmental impact. Examples include emerging zoonotic diseases and antimicrobial resistance (AMR). Interpretations and use of the term OH differ in the literature and have the potential to dilute its impact. The meaning of OH among the research community has evolved over time. Here, we collate the OH relevant literature from the last two decades, identifying major themes and trends and considering how OH has been embraced differently across various geographical regions.
Bibliographic databases were searched using the term "One Health" AND ("Veterinary" OR "Animal") AND ("Medicine" OR "Human") AND ("Environment" OR "Ecosystem") during the period between 1980 and 2022. Data analysis and narrative synthesis identified themes, similarities, and differences within literature. Web of Science and PubMed returned 948 and 1250 results for the period mentioned above. The predominant literature focused on human health, with veterinary health second, although often to benefit human health. It was found that OH is often utilised as a public health approach, generally towards the end of disease surveillance and control. Interestingly, while authors from low- and middle-income countries were well-represented within studies using the term OH, they were less well-represented as corresponding authors.
The predominant focus of the literature was on human and veterinary health, implying OH approach is human-orientated, despite its suggestion that all domains share a common 'health'. Potential improvement to OH could be achieved through greater incorporation of the environmental and social sciences for a more encompassing approach.
“同一健康”(OH)被定义为一种统一的方法,旨在可持续地平衡和优化人类、动物和生态系统的健康。它认识到人类、动物(包括家养和野生)、植物以及更广泛的生态系统的健康是相互依存和相互关联的。作为一个概念,它旨在解决需要多学科投入的复杂问题。适合采用“同一健康”方法的问题通常包括全球性问题,这些问题不仅会广泛影响人类和动物的健康,还会对环境产生重大影响。例子包括新发人畜共患病和抗菌药物耐药性(AMR)。文献中对“同一健康”一词的解释和使用有所不同,这有可能削弱其影响力。研究界对“同一健康”的理解随着时间的推移而演变。在此,我们整理了过去二十年中与“同一健康”相关的文献,确定主要主题和趋势,并考虑不同地理区域对“同一健康”的接受方式有何不同。
在1980年至2022年期间,使用“One Health”以及(“Veterinary”或“Animal”)以及(“Medicine”或“Human”)以及(“Environment”或“Ecosystem”)搜索文献数据库。数据分析和叙述性综合确定了文献中的主题、异同点。科学网和PubMed在上述期间分别返回了948条和1250条结果。主流文献聚焦于人类健康,其次是兽医健康,不过通常是为了造福人类健康。研究发现,“同一健康”通常被用作一种公共卫生方法,一般用于疾病监测和控制的后期。有趣的是,虽然在使用“同一健康”一词的研究中,低收入和中等收入国家的作者有很好的代表性,但作为通讯作者的代表性却较低。
文献的主要关注点是人类和兽医健康,这意味着“同一健康”方法是以人类为导向的,尽管它表明所有领域都共享一个共同的“健康”概念。通过更多地纳入环境和社会科学以采用更全面的方法,“同一健康”有可能得到改进。