Governing Towards 'One Health': Establishing Knowledge Integration in Global Health Security Governance
- PMID: 32336994
- PMCID: PMC7165607
- DOI: 10.1111/1758-5899.12505
Governing Towards 'One Health': Establishing Knowledge Integration in Global Health Security Governance
Abstract
Recent global threats (e.g. Ebola, avian influenza, the Zika virus) have demonstrated the need for policy makers to focus on the detection of risks at the animal-human interface. Yet epistemic knowledge across these domains is not sufficiently joined-up. The article argues that, despite some progress, in order for the policy agenda for global health security to develop towards a 'One Health' model there is a need for integration across public and animal health domains. This article sets out an evaluation framework for establishing knowledge integration across these sectors. The article concludes that although 'One Health may seem utopian, given there are key challenges when it comes to reaching integration, there are important steps that can be taken the short to medium-term. These include reforms to education and training programmes and interdisciplinary research collaborations. A key determinant of whether One Health becomes a paradigm which frames public policy, and leads to policy and institutional changes to enable public value creation and sustainability, is the presence of an 'epistemic community' that bridges health networks.
© 2017 University of Durham and John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
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