One Health Aotearoa: a transdisciplinary initiative to improve human, animal and environmental health in New Zealand.

One Health Outlook Pub Date : 2020-01-01 Epub Date: 2020-01-31 DOI:10.1186/s42522-020-0011-0
Sarah Harrison, Michael G Baker, Jackie Benschop, Russell G Death, Nigel P French, Garth Harmsworth, Robin J Lake, Iain L Lamont, Patricia C Priest, James E Ussher, David R Murdoch
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引用次数: 7

Abstract

There is increased recognition that complex health challenges at the human-animal-environmental interface require a transdisciplinary, "whole-of-society" approach. This philosophy is particularly pertinent in Aotearoa-New Zealand because of the country's relatively isolated island ecosystem, economic reliance on agriculture and its intensification, and existing indigenous worldview that emphasises holism and interconnectivity between humans, animals and the environment. In New Zealand, the One Health Aotearoa (OHA) alliance was established in order to better connect researchers and to address a growing number of infectious diseases challenges. The emphasis of OHA is to bring together and facilitate interactions between people from diverse disciplines, link to stakeholders and communities, and engage with policy-makers, government operational agencies, and funders, thus providing a holistic and integrative systems-thinking approach to address priority questions and achieve desired outcomes in One Health. The initial focus of OHA has been on infectious diseases, but there is increasing recognition of the potential benefits of the alliance to address broader complex issues. Greater involvement and overlap of the environmental sciences, human and animal health sciences, social science, and indigenous kaupapa Māori research is particularly critical for ensuring its success within the New Zealand context. Given the economic and cultural importance of New Zealand's "clean, green" image, a One Health approach that draws strongly on the environmental sciences makes particular sense. Furthermore, as the global environment becomes increasingly stressed by anthropogenic pressures our research may hold potential solutions for similar challenges elsewhere.

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一个健康Aotearoa:一项跨学科倡议,旨在改善新西兰的人类、动物和环境健康。
人们越来越认识到,人类-动物-环境界面的复杂健康挑战需要跨学科的“全社会”方法。这一理念在新西兰奥特亚瓦地区尤其适用,因为这个国家的生态系统相对孤立,经济依赖农业及其集约化,现有的土著世界观强调人、动物和环境之间的整体和相互联系。在新西兰,为了更好地将研究人员联系起来并应对越来越多的传染病挑战,建立了“同一个健康奥特罗阿”联盟。OHA的重点是汇集和促进来自不同学科的人员之间的互动,与利益攸关方和社区建立联系,并与决策者、政府业务机构和资助者接触,从而提供一种全面和综合的系统思维方法,以解决优先问题并实现“同一个健康”的预期成果。OHA最初的重点是传染病,但人们越来越认识到该联盟在解决更广泛的复杂问题方面的潜在好处。环境科学、人类和动物健康科学、社会科学和土著kaupapa Māori研究的更多参与和重叠对确保其在新西兰范围内取得成功尤为重要。考虑到新西兰“清洁、绿色”形象在经济和文化上的重要性,大力利用环境科学的“同一个健康”方法特别有意义。此外,随着全球环境受到人为压力的压力越来越大,我们的研究可能为其他地方的类似挑战提供潜在的解决方案。
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