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Stakeholder attitudes and perspectives on wildlife disease surveillance as a component of a One Health approach in Thailand

Coordinated wildlife disease surveillance (WDS) can help professionals across disciplines effectively safeguard human, animal, and environmental health. The aims of this study were to understand how WDS in Thailand is utilized, valued, and can be improved within a One Health framework. An online que...

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Autores principales: George, Serena Elise, Smink, Moniek, Sangkachai, Nareerat, Wiratsudakul, Anuwat, Sakcamduang, Walasinee, Suwanpakdee, Sarin, Sleeman, Jonathan M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10407262/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37559823
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.onehlt.2023.100600
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author George, Serena Elise
Smink, Moniek
Sangkachai, Nareerat
Wiratsudakul, Anuwat
Sakcamduang, Walasinee
Suwanpakdee, Sarin
Sleeman, Jonathan M.
author_facet George, Serena Elise
Smink, Moniek
Sangkachai, Nareerat
Wiratsudakul, Anuwat
Sakcamduang, Walasinee
Suwanpakdee, Sarin
Sleeman, Jonathan M.
author_sort George, Serena Elise
collection PubMed
description Coordinated wildlife disease surveillance (WDS) can help professionals across disciplines effectively safeguard human, animal, and environmental health. The aims of this study were to understand how WDS in Thailand is utilized, valued, and can be improved within a One Health framework. An online questionnaire was distributed to 183 professionals (55.7% response rate) across Thailand working in wildlife, marine animal, livestock, domestic animal, zoo animal, environmental, and public health sectors. Twelve semi-structured interviews with key professionals were then performed. Three-quarters of survey respondents reported using WDS data and information. Sectors agreed upon ranking disease control (76.5% of respondents) as the most beneficial outcome of WDS, while fostering new ideas through collaboration was valued by few participants (2.0%). Accessing data collected by one's own sector was identified as the most challenging (50%) yet least difficult to improve (88.3%). Having legal authority to conduct WDS was the second most frequently identified challenge. Interviewees explained that legal documentation required for cross-institutional collaborations posed a barrier to efficient communication and use of human resources. Survey respondents identified allocation of human resources (75.5%), adequate budget (71.6%), and having a clear communication system between sectors (71.6%) as highest priority areas for improvement to WDS in Thailand. Authorization from administrative officials and support from local community members were identified as challenges during in-person interviews. Future outreach may be directed toward these groups. As 42.9% of marine health professionals had difficulty knowing whom to contact in other sectors and 28.4% of survey respondents indicated that communication with marine health professionals was not applicable to their work, connecting the marine sector with other sectors may be prioritized. This study identifies priorities for addressing current challenges in the establishment of a general WDS system and information management system in Thailand while presenting a model for such evaluation in other regions.
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spelling pubmed-104072622023-08-09 Stakeholder attitudes and perspectives on wildlife disease surveillance as a component of a One Health approach in Thailand George, Serena Elise Smink, Moniek Sangkachai, Nareerat Wiratsudakul, Anuwat Sakcamduang, Walasinee Suwanpakdee, Sarin Sleeman, Jonathan M. One Health Research Paper Coordinated wildlife disease surveillance (WDS) can help professionals across disciplines effectively safeguard human, animal, and environmental health. The aims of this study were to understand how WDS in Thailand is utilized, valued, and can be improved within a One Health framework. An online questionnaire was distributed to 183 professionals (55.7% response rate) across Thailand working in wildlife, marine animal, livestock, domestic animal, zoo animal, environmental, and public health sectors. Twelve semi-structured interviews with key professionals were then performed. Three-quarters of survey respondents reported using WDS data and information. Sectors agreed upon ranking disease control (76.5% of respondents) as the most beneficial outcome of WDS, while fostering new ideas through collaboration was valued by few participants (2.0%). Accessing data collected by one's own sector was identified as the most challenging (50%) yet least difficult to improve (88.3%). Having legal authority to conduct WDS was the second most frequently identified challenge. Interviewees explained that legal documentation required for cross-institutional collaborations posed a barrier to efficient communication and use of human resources. Survey respondents identified allocation of human resources (75.5%), adequate budget (71.6%), and having a clear communication system between sectors (71.6%) as highest priority areas for improvement to WDS in Thailand. Authorization from administrative officials and support from local community members were identified as challenges during in-person interviews. Future outreach may be directed toward these groups. As 42.9% of marine health professionals had difficulty knowing whom to contact in other sectors and 28.4% of survey respondents indicated that communication with marine health professionals was not applicable to their work, connecting the marine sector with other sectors may be prioritized. This study identifies priorities for addressing current challenges in the establishment of a general WDS system and information management system in Thailand while presenting a model for such evaluation in other regions. Elsevier 2023-07-10 /pmc/articles/PMC10407262/ /pubmed/37559823 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.onehlt.2023.100600 Text en © 2023 The Authors https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Research Paper
George, Serena Elise
Smink, Moniek
Sangkachai, Nareerat
Wiratsudakul, Anuwat
Sakcamduang, Walasinee
Suwanpakdee, Sarin
Sleeman, Jonathan M.
Stakeholder attitudes and perspectives on wildlife disease surveillance as a component of a One Health approach in Thailand
title Stakeholder attitudes and perspectives on wildlife disease surveillance as a component of a One Health approach in Thailand
title_full Stakeholder attitudes and perspectives on wildlife disease surveillance as a component of a One Health approach in Thailand
title_fullStr Stakeholder attitudes and perspectives on wildlife disease surveillance as a component of a One Health approach in Thailand
title_full_unstemmed Stakeholder attitudes and perspectives on wildlife disease surveillance as a component of a One Health approach in Thailand
title_short Stakeholder attitudes and perspectives on wildlife disease surveillance as a component of a One Health approach in Thailand
title_sort stakeholder attitudes and perspectives on wildlife disease surveillance as a component of a one health approach in thailand
topic Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10407262/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37559823
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.onehlt.2023.100600
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