Fotakis Emmanouil Alexandros, Papamichail Dimitris, Boutsini Sofia, Patsoula Eleni, Panagiotopoulos Takis
Department of Public Health Policies, School of Public Health, University of West Attica, Athens, Greece.
MSc Course in Public Health (Specialty: Public Health Science and Policy), Department of Public Health Policy, School of Public Health, University of West Attica, Athens, Greece.
One Health. 2024 Sep 17;19:100896. doi: 10.1016/j.onehlt.2024.100896. eCollection 2024 Dec.
Leishmaniasis is a high burden neglected disease in the Mediterranean ecoregion, lacking surveillance attention. We aimed to provide an overview of the state of leishmaniasis surveillance in Greece, investigating the prospect of transitioning to a One Health surveillance system. We conducted a narrative review describing human and animal leishmaniasis data from Greece, including entomological findings. Through a separate review process, we describe the current leishmaniasis surveillance system pertaining to humans, animals, vectors and the environment. Additionally, we distributed likert-scale questionnaires to key informants, capturing expert-view on the necessity, existing levels and barriers of OH leishmaniasis surveillance in Greece. We identified key system strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats respective to a OH transition through SWOT analysis. Greece is endemic for zoonotic visceral leishmaniasis (VL) and canine leishmaniasis (CanL), displaying an increasing VL trend in recent years and high national seroprevalence rates in dogs (range: 13.8-23.4 %). Mandatory leishmaniasis notification in humans and animals, human case-based investigations, and active case finding activities in stray dogs, comprise valuable system components of high OH operational relevance. Conversely, the existing CanL surveillance governance and the lack of systematic entomological surveillance constitute important drawbacks. Moreover, the current context of public health and animal health financial constraints in Greece may impede a strategic OH transition in leishmaniasis surveillance. On the contrary, Greece's OH experience in West Nile Virus surveillance in conjunction with leishmaniasis-expert consensus on the necessity of OH surveillance and key barriers to its realization, compose important transition opportunities. Despite shortfalls in human, animal and vector surveillance, existing system characteristics, structures and practices comprise a promising basis for developing OH cross-sectoral leishmaniasis surveillance activities in Greece.
利什曼病是地中海生态区域一种负担沉重但被忽视的疾病,缺乏监测关注。我们旨在概述希腊利什曼病监测的状况,调查向“同一健康”监测系统转变的前景。我们进行了一项叙述性综述,描述了来自希腊的人类和动物利什曼病数据,包括昆虫学研究结果。通过单独的综述过程,我们描述了当前与人类、动物、病媒和环境相关的利什曼病监测系统。此外,我们向关键信息提供者发放了李克特量表问卷,获取他们对希腊“同一健康”利什曼病监测的必要性、现有水平和障碍的专家意见。我们通过SWOT分析确定了与向“同一健康”转变相关的关键系统优势、劣势、机会和威胁。希腊是人畜共患内脏利什曼病(VL)和犬利什曼病(CanL)的流行地区,近年来VL呈上升趋势,犬类的全国血清阳性率很高(范围:13.8 - 23.4%)。人类和动物利什曼病的强制通报、基于人类病例的调查以及对流浪狗的主动病例发现活动,构成了具有高度“同一健康”操作相关性的宝贵系统组成部分。相反,现有的犬利什曼病监测治理以及缺乏系统的昆虫学监测是重要的缺陷。此外,希腊目前公共卫生和动物卫生资金紧张的情况可能会阻碍利什曼病监测向战略性“同一健康”转变。相反,希腊在西尼罗河病毒监测方面的“同一健康”经验,以及利什曼病专家对“同一健康”监测的必要性和实现其的关键障碍的共识,构成了重要的转变机会。尽管在人类、动物和病媒监测方面存在不足,但现有系统的特征、结构和做法构成了在希腊开展“同一健康”跨部门利什曼病监测活动的良好基础。