Paul Mridula Mary, Pradhan Sunita, Chettri Aarti, Khaling Sarala, Vanak Abi T
Department of Geography & Environmental Sciences, Northumbria University, Ellison Building, Newcastle-upon-Tyne NE1 8ST, UK.
Ashoka Trust for Research in Ecology and the Environment, Regional Office-Northeast India, Gangtok, Sikkim 737101, India.
One Health. 2024 Dec 29;20:100963. doi: 10.1016/j.onehlt.2024.100963. eCollection 2025 Jun.
One Health as a policy framework to tackle zoonoses has gained wide-ranging validation with multiple international organizations throwing their collective might behind it. Such endorsement has convinced several governments to adopt One Health as a national strategy to address zoonoses. Although some argue that One Health is so many things that there are in fact multiple 'One Healths', others find that most international policy documents that use the One Health framing contain certain key recommendations, with intersectoral coordination and disease surveillance prominent among them. In this paper we examine whether and how One Health travels in a sub-national setting in a developing country context such as that of India, with particular focus on intersectoral coordination. We draw on documentary analysis, semi-structured interviews, and workshops with government officials across key sectoral agencies at the district level, to understand prevalent institutional mechanisms in place to address zoonoses in such a setting. We locate our study in the district of Gyalshing in the state of Sikkim in India, which is a potential zoonoses 'hotspot' given its location within the biodiverse Indian Himalayan Region, with numerous avenues for human-animal interactions, and burgeoning human population linked to its tourism-run economy. We outline successful cases where certain zoonotic diseases could be tackled, while also highlighting structural constraints that need to be borne in mind while planning or advocating One Health as a blanket policy prescription. In doing so, we draw attention to the political dimensions of global health policies, and question whether One Health can be uncritically deployed in developing country contexts.
“同一健康”作为应对人畜共患病的政策框架,已获得广泛认可,多个国际组织都全力支持。这种认可促使一些国家政府将“同一健康”作为应对人畜共患病的国家战略。尽管有人认为“同一健康”涵盖的内容太多,实际上存在多个“同一健康”,但也有人发现,大多数采用“同一健康”框架的国际政策文件都包含某些关键建议,其中部门间协调和疾病监测最为突出。在本文中,我们研究了在印度这样的发展中国家的次国家层面,“同一健康”是否以及如何推行,尤其关注部门间协调。我们通过文献分析、半结构化访谈以及与地区层面关键部门机构的政府官员举办研讨会,来了解在这种情况下应对人畜共患病的普遍制度机制。我们将研究地点选在印度锡金邦的杰尔辛地区,鉴于其位于生物多样性丰富的印度喜马拉雅地区,存在众多人畜互动途径,且与旅游业相关的经济带动了人口的快速增长,该地区是潜在的人畜共患病“热点”地区。我们概述了某些人畜共患病得以应对的成功案例,同时也强调了在将“同一健康”作为全面政策方案进行规划或倡导时需要考虑的结构限制。在此过程中,我们提请关注全球卫生政策的政治层面,并质疑“同一健康”是否能在发展中国家背景下不加批判地应用。