
IHR-PVS National Bridging Workshops, a tool to operationalize the collaboration between human and animal health while advancing sector-specific goals in countries
Author(s) -
Guillaume Belot,
F Caya,
Kaylee Myhre Errecaborde,
Tieble Traore,
Brice Lafia,
Artem Skrypnyk,
Djhane Montabord,
Maud Carron,
S Corning,
Rajesh Sreedharan,
Nicolas Isla,
Tanja Schmidt,
Gyanendra Gongal,
Dalia Samhouri,
Enrique Pérez Gutiérrez,
Ana Rivière-Cinnamond,
Jun Xing,
Stella Chungong,
Stéphane De La Rocque
Publication year - 2021
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.0245312
Subject(s) - operationalization , business , process (computing) , process management , bridging (networking) , knowledge management , animal health , one health , preparedness , medicine , computer science , public health , political science , veterinary medicine , computer security , nursing , philosophy , epistemology , law , operating system
Collaborative, One Health approaches support governments to effectively prevent, detect and respond to emerging health challenges, such as zoonotic diseases, that arise at the human-animal-environmental interfaces. To overcome these challenges, operational and outcome-oriented tools that enable animal health and human health services to work specifically on their collaboration are required. While international capacity and assessment frameworks such as the IHR-MEF (International Health Regulations—Monitoring and Evaluation Framework) and the OIE PVS (Performance of Veterinary Services) Pathway exist, a tool and process that could assess and strengthen the interactions between human and animal health sectors was needed. Through a series of six phased pilots, the IHR-PVS National Bridging Workshop (NBW) method was developed and refined. The NBW process gathers human and animal health stakeholders and follows seven sessions, scheduled across three days. The outputs from each session build towards the next one, following a structured process that goes from gap identification to joint planning of corrective measures. The NBW process allows human and animal health sector representatives to jointly identify actions that support collaboration while advancing evaluation goals identified through the IHR-MEF and the OIE PVS Pathway. By integrating sector-specific and collaborative goals, the NBWs help countries in creating a realistic, concrete and practical joint road map for enhanced compliance to international standards as well as strengthened preparedness and response for health security at the human-animal interface.