Capacitating One Health in Eastern and Southern Africa

The world is facing unprecedented, inter-connected threats to the health of people, animals and the environment. Threats to health security originating from animals and ecosystems can best prevented and managed by One Health (OH) which recognizes the interconnection of people, animals, plants, and t...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Mhone, Amos L., Akoko, James M., Grace, Delia, Caron, Alexandre, Karembu, Margaret, Mor, Siobhan M., Iraki, Bibiana, Nys, Hélène M. de, Fèvre, Eric M., Richards, Shauna, Ekaya, Wellington, Knight-Jones, Theodore J.D.
Format: Poster
Language:Inglés
Published: International Livestock Research Institute 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/121084
_version_ 1855521821410983936
author Mhone, Amos L.
Akoko, James M.
Grace, Delia
Caron, Alexandre
Karembu, Margaret
Mor, Siobhan M.
Iraki, Bibiana
Nys, Hélène M. de
Fèvre, Eric M.
Richards, Shauna
Ekaya, Wellington
Knight-Jones, Theodore J.D.
author_browse Akoko, James M.
Caron, Alexandre
Ekaya, Wellington
Fèvre, Eric M.
Grace, Delia
Iraki, Bibiana
Karembu, Margaret
Knight-Jones, Theodore J.D.
Mhone, Amos L.
Mor, Siobhan M.
Nys, Hélène M. de
Richards, Shauna
author_facet Mhone, Amos L.
Akoko, James M.
Grace, Delia
Caron, Alexandre
Karembu, Margaret
Mor, Siobhan M.
Iraki, Bibiana
Nys, Hélène M. de
Fèvre, Eric M.
Richards, Shauna
Ekaya, Wellington
Knight-Jones, Theodore J.D.
author_sort Mhone, Amos L.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description The world is facing unprecedented, inter-connected threats to the health of people, animals and the environment. Threats to health security originating from animals and ecosystems can best prevented and managed by One Health (OH) which recognizes the interconnection of people, animals, plants, and their shared environment. But attaining the OH dividend requires greater operationalization of OH science and harnessing the power of youth to solve the problems of the present and future. In line with this approach, this project aims to enhance national and sub-regional cross-sectoral collaboration between government entities with OH mandates and OH stakeholders across society, to equip educational and research institutes to train the next generation One Health workforce, and to increase the capacity of government and non-governmental stakeholders to identify and deliver OH solutions to key problems. To conceptualize the above objectives, we conducted an expert integrative review to identify OH capacity potential and gaps in eastern and southern Africa, to develop a four-year, eleven-country project to translate OH science to development impact. We identified neglected zoonoses, emerging zoonoses, food safety and livestock associated antimicrobial resistance as key OH domains, with soil health subsidiary. Multi-criteria processes identified 11 priority countries (Botswana, Ethiopia, Kenya, Malawi, Mozambique, Namibia, Rwanda, Tanzania, Uganda, Zambia, and Zimbabwe, of which four are deep dive) and four support areas (observatory, platforms, future workforce and field solutions). A consortium was developed of research and research translation institutes (three Africa-based) linked to multipliers in priority countries. Future OH capacity will be enhanced through strengthening educational institutions to deliver recognised OH courses. Delivery of solutions for a specific OH issue is planned for Ethiopia, Kenya, Mozambique and Zimbabwe, with the approach then used as a model for OH delivery. This initiative will ensure government entities capacitated in the development of evidence based One Health strategies and policies, education institutes strengthened in building OH capacity of the present and future workforce, and research institutes capacitated in identification, development, adoption and delivery of One Health solutions.
format Poster
id CGSpace121084
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2022
publishDateRange 2022
publishDateSort 2022
publisher International Livestock Research Institute
publisherStr International Livestock Research Institute
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace1210842025-11-04T17:24:33Z Capacitating One Health in Eastern and Southern Africa Mhone, Amos L. Akoko, James M. Grace, Delia Caron, Alexandre Karembu, Margaret Mor, Siobhan M. Iraki, Bibiana Nys, Hélène M. de Fèvre, Eric M. Richards, Shauna Ekaya, Wellington Knight-Jones, Theodore J.D. one health approach capacity building The world is facing unprecedented, inter-connected threats to the health of people, animals and the environment. Threats to health security originating from animals and ecosystems can best prevented and managed by One Health (OH) which recognizes the interconnection of people, animals, plants, and their shared environment. But attaining the OH dividend requires greater operationalization of OH science and harnessing the power of youth to solve the problems of the present and future. In line with this approach, this project aims to enhance national and sub-regional cross-sectoral collaboration between government entities with OH mandates and OH stakeholders across society, to equip educational and research institutes to train the next generation One Health workforce, and to increase the capacity of government and non-governmental stakeholders to identify and deliver OH solutions to key problems. To conceptualize the above objectives, we conducted an expert integrative review to identify OH capacity potential and gaps in eastern and southern Africa, to develop a four-year, eleven-country project to translate OH science to development impact. We identified neglected zoonoses, emerging zoonoses, food safety and livestock associated antimicrobial resistance as key OH domains, with soil health subsidiary. Multi-criteria processes identified 11 priority countries (Botswana, Ethiopia, Kenya, Malawi, Mozambique, Namibia, Rwanda, Tanzania, Uganda, Zambia, and Zimbabwe, of which four are deep dive) and four support areas (observatory, platforms, future workforce and field solutions). A consortium was developed of research and research translation institutes (three Africa-based) linked to multipliers in priority countries. Future OH capacity will be enhanced through strengthening educational institutions to deliver recognised OH courses. Delivery of solutions for a specific OH issue is planned for Ethiopia, Kenya, Mozambique and Zimbabwe, with the approach then used as a model for OH delivery. This initiative will ensure government entities capacitated in the development of evidence based One Health strategies and policies, education institutes strengthened in building OH capacity of the present and future workforce, and research institutes capacitated in identification, development, adoption and delivery of One Health solutions. 2022-08-24 2022-09-05T10:17:34Z 2022-09-05T10:17:34Z Poster https://hdl.handle.net/10568/121084 en Open Access application/pdf International Livestock Research Institute Mhone, A.L., Akoko, J., Grace, D., Caron, A., Karembu, M., Mor, S., Iraki, B., Nys, H. De, Fèvre, E.M., Richards, S., Ekaya, W. and Knight-Jones, T. 2022. Capacitating One Health in Eastern and Southern Africa. Poster presented at the 19th annual Southern African Society for Veterinary Epidemiology and Preventive Medicine (SASVEPM) congress, 24-26 August 2022, East London, South Africa. Nairobi, Kenya: ILRI.
spellingShingle one health approach
capacity building
Mhone, Amos L.
Akoko, James M.
Grace, Delia
Caron, Alexandre
Karembu, Margaret
Mor, Siobhan M.
Iraki, Bibiana
Nys, Hélène M. de
Fèvre, Eric M.
Richards, Shauna
Ekaya, Wellington
Knight-Jones, Theodore J.D.
Capacitating One Health in Eastern and Southern Africa
title Capacitating One Health in Eastern and Southern Africa
title_full Capacitating One Health in Eastern and Southern Africa
title_fullStr Capacitating One Health in Eastern and Southern Africa
title_full_unstemmed Capacitating One Health in Eastern and Southern Africa
title_short Capacitating One Health in Eastern and Southern Africa
title_sort capacitating one health in eastern and southern africa
topic one health approach
capacity building
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/121084
work_keys_str_mv AT mhoneamosl capacitatingonehealthineasternandsouthernafrica
AT akokojamesm capacitatingonehealthineasternandsouthernafrica
AT gracedelia capacitatingonehealthineasternandsouthernafrica
AT caronalexandre capacitatingonehealthineasternandsouthernafrica
AT karembumargaret capacitatingonehealthineasternandsouthernafrica
AT morsiobhanm capacitatingonehealthineasternandsouthernafrica
AT irakibibiana capacitatingonehealthineasternandsouthernafrica
AT nyshelenemde capacitatingonehealthineasternandsouthernafrica
AT fevreericm capacitatingonehealthineasternandsouthernafrica
AT richardsshauna capacitatingonehealthineasternandsouthernafrica
AT ekayawellington capacitatingonehealthineasternandsouthernafrica
AT knightjonestheodorejd capacitatingonehealthineasternandsouthernafrica