Category: Front Page News

  • Belgian OneHealth – EcoHealth Newsletter

    Download the October edition of the Belgian OneHealth – EcoHealth Newsletter here

    CONTENTS
    Events in Belgium

    1. Guest lecture Working with Models of Ageing – Entanglements of Human and Animal Health and Wellbeing
    2. Climate change and health conference – Federal Council for Sustainable
      Development
    3. ASCID Evening Symposium on Tick-borne Diseases
    4. Day of Environmental Health at the School for Public Health
    5. 30 year anniversary celebration of the Institute for Environment and Sustainable
      development

    International Events

    1. Registration open for Healthy Urban Living – H2020 Health Matchmaking & Infoday
    2. Info Day on Health, Demographic Change and Wellbeing
    3. The International Society for Economics and Social Sciences of Animal Health
      Conference

    International Publications

    1. Call for Papers: Medicines for the Anthropocene: Health on a Finite Planet
    2. Agrobiodiversity Investments as Triple Win for Health, Environment and Food
      System Sustainability
    3. Botanic Gardens: Using Biodiversity to Improve Human Well-being

    Interview
    “3 questions to” Thierry van den Berg, Operational director Animal infectious
    diseases at CODA-CERVA

  • First article in NEOH special topic in Frontiers

    The first article in the NEOH special topic in Frontiers has been published: 

    The Degree of One Health Implementation in the West Nile Virus Integrated Surveillance in Northern Italy, 2016

    Paternoster Giulia, Tomassone Laura, Tamba Marco et al
    Frontiers in Public Health (2017), 5: 236
    DOI: 10.3389/fpubh.2017.00236     ISSN=2296-2565

    West Nile virus (WNV) is endemic in the Po valley area, Northern Italy, and within the legal framework of the national plan for the surveillance of human vector-borne diseases, WNV surveillance has over time been implemented.

    The surveillance plans are based on the transdisciplinary and trans-sectorial collaboration between regional institutions involved in public, animal, and environmental health. This integrated surveillance targets mosquitoes, wild birds, humans, and horses, and aims at early detecting the viral circulation and reducing the risk of infection in the human populations.

    The objective of our study was to assess the degree of One Health implementation (One Health-ness) of the WNV surveillance system in three North Italian regions (Emilia-Romagna, Lombardy, Piedmont) in 2016, following the evaluation protocol developed by the Network for Evaluation of One Health (NEOH).

    In detail, we
    (i) described the OH initiative (drivers, outcomes) and its system (boundaries, aim, dimensions, actors, stakeholders) and
    (ii) scored different aspects of this initiative (i.e. OH -thinking, -planning, -sharing, -learning, transdisciplinarity and leadership), with values from zero (= no OH approach) to one (= perfect OH approach).

    We obtained a mean score for each aspect evaluated. We reached high scores for OH thinking (0.90) and OH planning (0.89). Lower scores were attributed to OH sharing (0.83), transdisciplinarity and leadership (0.77) and OH learning (0.67), highlighting some critical issues related to communication and learning gaps.

    The strengths and weaknesses detected by the described quantitative evaluation will be investigated in detail by a qualitative evaluation (process evaluation), aiming to provide a basis for the development of shared recommendations to refine the initiative and conduct it in a more One Health oriented perspective.

    https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpubh.2017.00236/full

  • Belgian Biodiversity Platform website has been revamped! 

    The Belgian Biodiversity Platform website has been revamped!

    It is now easier than ever to get to know what they are currently working on and how this can be relevant to you!

    As a science-policy interface, they act as knowledge broker in several ways and at various levels (national, European, and international). The also provide scientists, policy-makers, practitioners and other stakeholders, the opportunity to incubate their knowledge with other experts on topical issues (eg. Invasive Alien Species (IAS), Ecosystems & Society (BEES), Biodiversity & Health (CoPBH), Nature-based Solutions (NbS), etc.) Furthermore, we are very active in the mobilisation and publication of biodiversity data!

    Discover their new resources section with recommendations and videos! Make sure to check their tips and tools page offering a myriad of practical information and tips to ease your work as a scientist, policy-maker or practitioner. And don’t miss their News section featuring news related to biodiversity research and policy; and their Events page offering an overview of upcoming events in Belgium and worldwide.

    Get all the information about them, meet the team, and don’t hesitate to contact them!

  • Journal Paper: One Health for a changing world

    One Health for a changing world: new perspectives from Africa.
    Cunningham AA, Scoones I, Wood JLN
    Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2017 Jul 19;372(1725). 

    Abstract

    The concept of One Health, which aims to drive improvements in human, animal and ecological health through an holistic approach, has been gaining increasing support and attention in recent years. While this concept has much appeal, there are few examples where it has been successfully put into practice. This Special Issue explores the challenges in African contexts, with papers looking at the complex interactions between ecosystems, diseases and poverty dynamics; at underlying social and political dimensions; at the potentials for integrative modelling; and at the changes in policy and practice required to realise a One Health approach. This introductory paper offers an overview of the 11 papers, coming from diverse disciplinary perspectives, that each explore how a One Health approach can work in a world of social, economic and environmental change.

    Read more at: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5468687/