Will the COVID-19 crisis trigger a One Health coming-of-age?

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Will the COVID-19 crisis trigger a One Health coming-of-age?

https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lanplh/article/PIIS2542-5196(20)30179-0/fulltext

As the COVID-19 pandemic continues across the globe, leaving governments and public health services in shock and disarray, calls have been made for the need to adopt One Health approaches to address the failure to predict and halt the emergence of COVID-19.
 
The novel severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 is widely suggested to have originated in Asia from a bat reservoir, possibly also involving other animal bridge species. As such, the focus of One Health on the human–animal–environment interface appears particularly compelling.
We concur, however, we warn that conceptual and institutional ambiguities that preclude the practical implementation and evaluation of One Health remain to be resolved.

 
One Health was initially adopted by major health agencies more than a decade ago to promote interdisciplinary collaborations among biomedical scholars and practitioners, and then progressively with workers in the environmental and social sciences, with the aim of establishing a more society-wide responsibility for the health of humans and the whole planetary ecosystem. One Health is embedded within the concept of EcoHealth, which further extends the scope to complex human–environment systems.

 

This broader concept of health in social–ecological systems gained momentum, adopting a transdisciplinary action-research posture, and converged with sustainability sciences. Social-ecological systems uniquely formalised and explicitly defined resilience as a property of complex adaptive systems, the theoretical and practical validity of which is now supported by hundreds of case examples of diverse social–ecological systems.

 

However, the word resilience is often used in a health context without a clear reference to this dimension of social–ecological systems, or any other explicit definition. The term resilience is especially confusing in the fields of public and animal health, in which resilience has several different meanings.

 

Use of the term resilience in an environmental health systems context should be accompanied by a clear specification of whether or not its intended meaning is consistent with the social–ecological systems framework. Overcoming the fundamental ambiguities in the framing of One Health—ie, whether it addresses the resilience of social–ecological systems or the health of humans, animals, and the bio-physical environment in the context of social–ecological systems—is essential to overcoming a number of challenges to its practical implementation as a transdisciplinary concept.

 
Without more explicit framing as complex systems, the ambitions of One Health are likely to fail most of the time at the implementation phase due to functional mismatches between the scale of management and the scale of the processes being managed. ...
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