Dar Osman Ahmed, Akhbari Melika, Nacer Hadjer
London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London, UK
King's College London Department of Medical Education, London, UK.
BMJ Open. 2024 Dec 3;14(12):e086248. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2024-086248.
Recent decades have seen a growth in multisectoral and transdisciplinary approaches to improving global health, particularly across human, animal and environmental health-related sciences that advocate for participatory, systems-based perspectives to understanding and promoting health and well-being in the context of social and ecological interactions. For several issues, including human health, animal health and food security, researchers have highlighted the need for transdisciplinary One Health approaches to assess the sustainability of interventions. To understand the current thinking and conceptualisation of sustainability across One Health disciplines, we present a protocol paper for an umbrella systematic review study planned in 2024.
A search strategy based on Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Review and Meta-Analyses guidelines was developed. The Medline, Embase, Global Health and Web of Science Core Collection were the four databases interrogated through the search strategy and included all articles found in the English language up to 14 April 2024. Meta-analyses, systematic, structured literature reviews and narrative reviews on sustainability will be included and a full-text review of all articles will be undertaken. The articles will be quality appraised using the AMSTAR 2 tool. Data that cover proposed factors influencing and characterising sustainability will be extracted across One Health disciplines including similarities and differences, and a summative content analysis will be completed to identify any emerging themes and develop an analytical framework. The conceptualisation of sustainability in the context of One Health multisectoral approaches will be summarised, a definition of sustainability proposed and include an identification of tools for measuring and assessing sustainability.
No primary data will be collected; therefore, ethical approval will not be required. The results will be disseminated in peer-reviewed literature and conference presentations. The findings will also be directly disseminated to the Quadripartite agencies.
CRD42018094031.
近几十年来,为改善全球健康,多部门和跨学科方法不断发展,尤其是在与人类、动物和环境健康相关的科学领域,这些方法倡导采用基于系统的参与性视角,在社会和生态互动背景下理解和促进健康与福祉。对于包括人类健康、动物健康和粮食安全在内的若干问题,研究人员强调需要采用跨学科的“同一健康”方法来评估干预措施的可持续性。为了解“同一健康”各学科对可持续性的当前认识和概念化,我们提出了一份2024年计划开展的伞形系统评价研究的方案文件。
制定了一项基于系统评价与Meta分析的首选报告项目(PRISMA)指南的检索策略。通过该检索策略对Medline、Embase、全球健康数据库和科学网核心合集这四个数据库进行检索,纳入截至2024年4月14日找到的所有英文文章。将纳入关于可持续性的Meta分析、系统的、结构化的文献综述和叙述性综述,并对所有文章进行全文审查。将使用AMSTAR 2工具对文章进行质量评估。将提取涵盖“同一健康”各学科中影响和表征可持续性的拟议因素的数据,包括异同点,并将完成总结性内容分析,以识别任何新出现的主题并制定分析框架。将总结“同一健康”多部门方法背景下可持续性的概念化,提出可持续性的定义,并确定用于衡量和评估可持续性的工具。
不会收集原始数据;因此,无需伦理批准。研究结果将在同行评审文献和会议报告中传播。研究结果还将直接传播给四方机构。
PROSPERO注册号:CRD42018094031。