Gashema Pierre, Sesonga Placide, Iradukunda Patrick Gad, Muvunyi Richard, Mugisha Jean Claude, Ndayisenga Jerome, Musafiri Tumusime, Habimana Richard, Bigirimana Radjabu, Kabanda Alice, Gashegu Misbah, Gahamanyi Noel, Izudi Jonathan, Siddig Emmanuel Edwar, Ngabonziza Jean Claude Semuto, Ahmed Ayman, Dzinamarira Tafadzwa, Mutesa Leon, Muvunyi Claude Mambo
Rwanda Joint Task Force for Marburg Virus Disease Outbreak, Ministry of Health, Rwanda Biomedical Centre, Kigali, Rwanda.
Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
One Health. 2025 Jul 9;21:101136. doi: 10.1016/j.onehlt.2025.101136. eCollection 2025 Dec.
Integrated One Health surveillance is pivotal to Africa's future health security, particularly in preventing and managing zoonotic and environmental health threats. The One Health strategy recognizes the interconnectedness of human, animal, and environmental health, allowing a holistic framework for tracking and responding to emerging and re-emerging pathogens. The One Health approach facilitates cross-sectoral data sharing and enhances surveillance, enabling the early detection and response to potential outbreaks. This proactive approach shifts the paradigm from reactive crisis management to preventive containment strategies. However, challenges such as funding gaps, limited infrastructure, limited diagnostic capacity, and weak multi-sectoral and cross-border collaborations remain. This perspective paper aims to 1) explore the effectiveness of integrated One Health surveillance in early detection and response to zoonotic diseases and environmental threats in Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA), and 2) identify key challenges and proposed solutions to strengthen regional health security. A multisectoral laboratory working group (MLWG) emerged as a pillar to enable active surveillance targeting humans, animals, and the environment. This paper highlighted essential strategies for enhancing One Health surveillance in SSA in light of the recent Marburg virus disease in Rwanda. It emphasizes environmental sampling through animal excreta and wastewater surveillance for early zoonotic detection, advocates for point-of-care polymerase chain reaction (PCR) testing platforms, and multiplex models to improve decentralized diagnostics. With 48 % of African nations incorporating One Health in national agendas, a unified continental framework is needed to support broader adoption and advance regional health security.
一体化的“同一健康”监测对于非洲未来的卫生安全至关重要,尤其是在预防和管理人畜共患病及环境卫生威胁方面。“同一健康”战略认识到人类、动物和环境卫生的相互关联性,为追踪和应对新出现及再度出现的病原体提供了一个整体框架。“同一健康”方法促进跨部门数据共享并加强监测,从而能够早期发现并应对潜在疫情。这种积极主动的方法将范式从被动的危机管理转变为预防性控制策略。然而,资金缺口、基础设施有限、诊断能力不足以及多部门和跨境合作薄弱等挑战依然存在。本观点论文旨在:1)探讨一体化的“同一健康”监测在撒哈拉以南非洲(SSA)早期发现和应对人畜共患病及环境威胁方面的有效性,以及2)确定加强区域卫生安全的关键挑战和提出的解决方案。一个多部门实验室工作组(MLWG)成为了实现针对人类、动物和环境的主动监测的支柱。鉴于卢旺达最近出现的马尔堡病毒病,本文重点介绍了在撒哈拉以南非洲加强“同一健康”监测的基本策略。它强调通过动物排泄物和废水监测进行环境采样以早期发现人畜共患病,倡导即时检验聚合酶链反应(PCR)检测平台以及多重模型以改善分散式诊断。由于48%的非洲国家已将“同一健康”纳入国家议程,因此需要一个统一的大陆框架来支持更广泛的采用并推进区域卫生安全。