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Factors that enable effective One Health collaborations - A scoping review of the literature
Author(s) -
Kaylee Myhre Errecaborde,
Katelyn Macy,
Amy Pekol,
Sol Perez,
Mary O’Brien,
Ian Allen,
Francesca M. Contadini,
Julia Yeri Lee,
Elizabeth Mumford,
Jeffrey B. Bender,
Katharine M. Pelican
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
plos one
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.99
H-Index - 332
ISSN - 1932-6203
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pone.0224660
Subject(s) - multidisciplinary approach , process (computing) , knowledge management , peer review , public relations , computer science , political science , law , operating system
Advocates for a One Health approach recognize that global health challenges require multidisciplinary collaborative efforts. While past publications have looked at interdisciplinary competency training for collaboration, few have identified the factors and conditions that enable operational One Health. Through a scoping review of the literature, a multidisciplinary team of researchers analyzed peer-reviewed publications describing multisectoral collaborations around infectious disease-related health events. The review identified 12 factors that support successful One Health collaborations and a coordinated response to health events across three levels: two individual factors (education & training and prior experience & existing relationships), four organizational factors (organizational structures, culture, human resources and, communication), and six network factors (network structures, relationships, leadership, management, available & accessible resources, political environment). The researchers also identified the stage of collaboration during which these factors were most critical, further organizing into starting condition or process-based factors. The research found that publications on multisectoral collaboration for health events do not uniformly report on successes or challenges of collaboration and rarely identify outputs or outcomes of the collaborative process. This paper proposes a common language and framework to enable more uniform reporting, implementation, and evaluation of future One Health collaborations.

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