Millennium Post (Kolkata)

Amalgamati­on of discipline­s

- writes Debanjana Dey

Nexus of science, social science, indigenous knowledge and policy is necessary for the success of ‘One Health’ approach;

The COVID-19 pandemic has renewed interest among scientists and policymake­rs in building an integrated approach for prevention, early detection and institutin­g appropriat­e responses to control such public health emergencie­s.

‘Pandemic-preparedne­ss plans’ are already under considerat­ion among major internatio­nal bodies to thwart the pandemic in the future. The multi-disciplina­ry approaches of ‘One Health’ are central to these plans.

The core of the One Health approach is rooted in acknowledg­ing and understand­ing the interdepen­dence of human and natural systems to obtain optimal health for people, animals and the environmen­t.

About 60 per cent of the known infectious diseases in humans and 75 per cent of all emerging infectious diseases are caused by pathogens that originate in animals, according to the Centers for Diseases Control and Prevention.

Antibiotic-resistant microbes also can effectivel­y be transmitte­d from animals to humans and cause diseases in humans which may not respond to affordable antibiotic­s.

Extensive and irrational use of antibiotic­s, especially in the livestock sector for increasing yield and preventing diseases, causes the emergence and selection of resistant pathogens. These spread through animal-human interactio­n or the food chain.

One Health can have the following benefits:

Reduce potential threats at the human-animal-environmen­t interface to control diseases that spread between animals and humans

Tackle anti-microbial resistance (AMR)

Ensure food safety

Prevent environmen­t-related health threats to humans and animals

Protect biodiversi­ty

The One Health concept is not new but it is important to address the complex health and environmen­tal challenges that have become more prominent in recent years. This is because a potential solution to these problems can only be understood when the human, animal, and environmen­tal health questions are evaluated in an integrated and holistic manner rather than in siloed approaches.

An important aspect of such an integrated approach is the systematic collection of data on the occurrence of infectious diseases and related behaviours in both humans and animals. Improved collaborat­ion, coordinati­on and commitment of relevant sectors to minimise the impact of these diseases on human health is also a salient feature.

The Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on of the United Nations (FAO), the World Organizati­on for Animal Health (OIE) and the World Health Organizati­on (WHO), under their tripartite agreement and in collaborat­ion with the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) and the World Bank, have developed a joint strategic framework to implement the One Health approach.

The framework aims to assist national authoritie­s in initiating steps to strengthen efforts towards the control of zoonoses and AMR in a comprehens­ive manner through collaborat­ive activities among various sectors for a healthier and more productive human and animal population coexisting in a safe environmen­t.

The implementa­tion of One Health can be driven by policies (legislatio­ns and regulation­s, financing), knowledge sharing, institutio­nal collaborat­ion, joint programmes and operationa­l plans, advocacy and awareness amongst policymake­rs and profession­als, engagement of civil society and active community participat­ion.

In India, efforts have been made to bring human and animal health together. There have been instances of collaborat­ion at national and state levels to combat specific diseases or to overcome disease outbreaks such as the national influenza pandemic committee to control avian influenza and rabies in Tamil Nadu and other states.

Institutes like the Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR) and the Indian Council of Agricultur­al Research (ICAR) have collaborat­ed on joint research priorities, mostly to control disease outbreaks and also at individual levels between human and animal health researcher­s as well as practition­ers.

The Integrated Disease Surveillan­ce Project, launched in 2004 for disease outbreak detection and rapid response functions, has generated various informatio­n on the flow of certain disease outbreaks but the programme has been unable to integrate human and animal (livestock and wildlife) surveillan­ce.

A multi-disciplina­ry Road Map to Combat Zoonoses (2008) was laid out to create an integrated mechanism for surveillan­ce, detection and treatment of zoonoses. It identified several strategies for research and actions, but integrated surveillan­ce, involving human, domestic and wildlife for long-term monitoring on a large scale has failed to materialis­e. As a result, the burden and dynamics of emerging and re-emerging infectious diseases are yet to be understood.

But recently, there have been several proactive steps which acknowledg­e the relationsh­ips between biodiversi­ty loss, changing land-use patterns and zoonotic diseases.

The National Mission on Biodiversi­ty and Human wellbeing is built on a framework that integrates biodiversi­ty, ecosystem services, climate change, agricultur­e, health, bio-economy and capacitybu­ilding in the realm of biodiversi­ty science has one mission component that explicitly links biodiversi­ty to human health through the One Health approach.

The Government of India decided to set up a dedicated centre under ICMR to contain zoonotic diseases — the Centre for One Health at Nagpur, and also constitute­d a ‘National Expert Group on One Health’ to promote multi-sectoral, transdisci­plinary, collaborat­ion and cooperatio­n to adopt and implement a One Health framework in India.

In the past, India has combatted several zoonotic diseases and has a robust institutio­nal network for biomedical research, which can lead and operationa­lise the One Health approach.

For One Health science, it is important to develop databases and models with a consolidat­ed approach of ecologists, field biologists, epidemiolo­gists and other scientists. The Kyasanur Forest Disease Model is one such example.

Also, the core strategies put forward by the National Framework for One Health, 2021 by FAO can guide towards overcoming the systemic barriers to implementi­ng the One Health approach.

The strategy element involves:

Improving the capacity for public health actions in major stakeholde­rs human health, animal health and environmen­t management

Understand­ing and responding to the drivers that threaten health; optimising the effectiven­ess of public health systems in achieving these goals within each sector

Institutio­nalise strong, continuous and mutually beneficial coordinati­on and collaborat­ion between all stakeholde­rs through multidisci­plinary and multi-institutio­nal joint planning and implementa­tion

Therefore, a nexus of science, social science, indigenous knowledge and policy at national, state and local levels can put forward strategies and institutio­ns for the implementa­tion of One Health.

The core of the One Health approach is rooted in acknowledg­ing and understand­ing the interdepen­dence of human and natural systems to obtain optimal health for people, animals and the environmen­t

 ?? ?? India has a robust institutio­nal network for biomedical research
India has a robust institutio­nal network for biomedical research

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