Improving food safety in Asia through increased capacity in ecohealth

Interest has increased considerably in the last five years in transdisciplinary approaches to addressing the precipitating factors of emerging infectious and zoonotic diseases. During this time, several One Health and ecohealth initiatives have begun in Asia. This paper reports on recommendations co...

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Main Authors: Hall, D.C., Hung Nguyen-Viet, Willyanto, I., Tung, D.X., Chotinun, S.
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: Academic Journals 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/33979
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author Hall, D.C.
Hung Nguyen-Viet
Willyanto, I.
Tung, D.X.
Chotinun, S.
author_browse Chotinun, S.
Hall, D.C.
Hung Nguyen-Viet
Tung, D.X.
Willyanto, I.
author_facet Hall, D.C.
Hung Nguyen-Viet
Willyanto, I.
Tung, D.X.
Chotinun, S.
author_sort Hall, D.C.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Interest has increased considerably in the last five years in transdisciplinary approaches to addressing the precipitating factors of emerging infectious and zoonotic diseases. During this time, several One Health and ecohealth initiatives have begun in Asia. This paper reports on recommendations coming out of one such initiative (the Building Ecohealth Capacity in Asia project) and outlines a strategy for promoting an ecohealth approach in research and in practice relevant to prioritized concerns relating to reducing zoonotic disease in Asia. The three main aspects of the strategy that are presented and discussed include: (1) Promote transdisciplinary approaches to understanding the complexity of zoonotic disease that compromise food safety; (2) increase teaching and application of ecohealth in medical sciences and other subjects relevant to food safety; and (3) bring ecohealth and One Health approaches into health policy discussions, particularly where these discussions influence policy formulation. Main constraints to applying such a strategy include limited awareness and knowledge of ecohealth and One Health, lack of willingness to engage in a transdisciplinary setting, restricted capacity to change academic curricula, rigid institutional frameworks for problem solving, and availability of funding. Suggestions for reducing these constraints are addressed.816600
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spelling CGSpace339792024-04-25T06:00:45Z Improving food safety in Asia through increased capacity in ecohealth Hall, D.C. Hung Nguyen-Viet Willyanto, I. Tung, D.X. Chotinun, S. food safety zoonoses health Interest has increased considerably in the last five years in transdisciplinary approaches to addressing the precipitating factors of emerging infectious and zoonotic diseases. During this time, several One Health and ecohealth initiatives have begun in Asia. This paper reports on recommendations coming out of one such initiative (the Building Ecohealth Capacity in Asia project) and outlines a strategy for promoting an ecohealth approach in research and in practice relevant to prioritized concerns relating to reducing zoonotic disease in Asia. The three main aspects of the strategy that are presented and discussed include: (1) Promote transdisciplinary approaches to understanding the complexity of zoonotic disease that compromise food safety; (2) increase teaching and application of ecohealth in medical sciences and other subjects relevant to food safety; and (3) bring ecohealth and One Health approaches into health policy discussions, particularly where these discussions influence policy formulation. Main constraints to applying such a strategy include limited awareness and knowledge of ecohealth and One Health, lack of willingness to engage in a transdisciplinary setting, restricted capacity to change academic curricula, rigid institutional frameworks for problem solving, and availability of funding. Suggestions for reducing these constraints are addressed.816600 2013-08-30 2013-11-08T09:51:31Z 2013-11-08T09:51:31Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/33979 en Open Access Academic Journals Hall, D.C., Hung Nguyen-Viet, Willyanto, I., Tung, D.X. and Chotinun S. 2013. Improving food safety in Asia through increased capacity in ecohealth. Journal of Public Health and Epidemiology 5(8): 336-340.
spellingShingle food safety
zoonoses
health
Hall, D.C.
Hung Nguyen-Viet
Willyanto, I.
Tung, D.X.
Chotinun, S.
Improving food safety in Asia through increased capacity in ecohealth
title Improving food safety in Asia through increased capacity in ecohealth
title_full Improving food safety in Asia through increased capacity in ecohealth
title_fullStr Improving food safety in Asia through increased capacity in ecohealth
title_full_unstemmed Improving food safety in Asia through increased capacity in ecohealth
title_short Improving food safety in Asia through increased capacity in ecohealth
title_sort improving food safety in asia through increased capacity in ecohealth
topic food safety
zoonoses
health
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/33979
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