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Implementation of one health approach in Jordan: Joint risk assessment of rabies and avian influenza utilizing the tripartite operational tool

Background Health challenges at the human-animal-environment interface vary and include zoonotic and food-borne diseases as well as antimicrobial resistance. These are serious threats to animal and public health, and account for the majority of emerging and re-emerging conditions or infectious disea...

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Autores principales: Abutarbush, Sameeh M., Hamdallah, Alaa, Hawawsheh, Majid, Alsawalha, Lora, Elizz, Nour Abu, Dodeen, Rachel, Mousa, Ayman Bani, Alhawarat, Mohammad N., Hailat, Ekhlas, Mahrous, Heba
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9754930/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36532668
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.onehlt.2022.100453
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author Abutarbush, Sameeh M.
Hamdallah, Alaa
Hawawsheh, Majid
Alsawalha, Lora
Elizz, Nour Abu
Dodeen, Rachel
Mousa, Ayman Bani
Alhawarat, Mohammad N.
Hailat, Ekhlas
Mahrous, Heba
author_facet Abutarbush, Sameeh M.
Hamdallah, Alaa
Hawawsheh, Majid
Alsawalha, Lora
Elizz, Nour Abu
Dodeen, Rachel
Mousa, Ayman Bani
Alhawarat, Mohammad N.
Hailat, Ekhlas
Mahrous, Heba
author_sort Abutarbush, Sameeh M.
collection PubMed
description Background Health challenges at the human-animal-environment interface vary and include zoonotic and food-borne diseases as well as antimicrobial resistance. These are serious threats to animal and public health, and account for the majority of emerging and re-emerging conditions or infectious diseases. Reducing zoonotic disease threats requires an understanding of where and why risks exist. To support countries in building multi-sectoral mechanisms to jointly assess the risks at the human–animal–environment interface, a new operational tool is available to complement the existing tripartite guide to addressing zoonotic diseases in countries. The aim of this study is to conduct joint risk assessment (JRA) of rabies and avian influenza in Jordan utilizing the tripartite Joint Risk Assessment Operational Tool (JRA OT). Methods Representatives of sectors that are involved in zoonotic diseases outbreak investigation, control, surveillance and risk assessment, were trained on JRA OT. The operational tool of tripartite guide to addressing zoonotic diseases in countries that was developed by WHO (World Health Organization), FAO (Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations) and WOAH (World Organization for Animal Health) was utilized to conduct risk assessment for rabies and H5N1 avian influenza in Jordan. Results The risk assessment outcome for rabies were as follows: Likelihood is high; impact is moderate with moderate level of uncertainty. The impact of the disease is moderate because the virus transmitted only by animal bite in Jordan. The level of uncertainty is moderate due to existence of some gaps in data available from the ministries regarding the surveillance and collection areas of wild animals with feral dogs. The risk assessment outcome for H5N1 AI indicated a low likelihood estimate with moderate uncertainty level. The impact estimate for H5N1 AI in Jordan is moderate with a low level of uncertainty. Conclusions The tripartite JRA OT provides a helpful and easy to follow guide to bring together expertise and information from all relevant sectors to jointly assess risks from zoonotic diseases and contributes to the understanding and management of shared threats at the human–animal–environment interface.
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spelling pubmed-97549302022-12-17 Implementation of one health approach in Jordan: Joint risk assessment of rabies and avian influenza utilizing the tripartite operational tool Abutarbush, Sameeh M. Hamdallah, Alaa Hawawsheh, Majid Alsawalha, Lora Elizz, Nour Abu Dodeen, Rachel Mousa, Ayman Bani Alhawarat, Mohammad N. Hailat, Ekhlas Mahrous, Heba One Health Research Paper Background Health challenges at the human-animal-environment interface vary and include zoonotic and food-borne diseases as well as antimicrobial resistance. These are serious threats to animal and public health, and account for the majority of emerging and re-emerging conditions or infectious diseases. Reducing zoonotic disease threats requires an understanding of where and why risks exist. To support countries in building multi-sectoral mechanisms to jointly assess the risks at the human–animal–environment interface, a new operational tool is available to complement the existing tripartite guide to addressing zoonotic diseases in countries. The aim of this study is to conduct joint risk assessment (JRA) of rabies and avian influenza in Jordan utilizing the tripartite Joint Risk Assessment Operational Tool (JRA OT). Methods Representatives of sectors that are involved in zoonotic diseases outbreak investigation, control, surveillance and risk assessment, were trained on JRA OT. The operational tool of tripartite guide to addressing zoonotic diseases in countries that was developed by WHO (World Health Organization), FAO (Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations) and WOAH (World Organization for Animal Health) was utilized to conduct risk assessment for rabies and H5N1 avian influenza in Jordan. Results The risk assessment outcome for rabies were as follows: Likelihood is high; impact is moderate with moderate level of uncertainty. The impact of the disease is moderate because the virus transmitted only by animal bite in Jordan. The level of uncertainty is moderate due to existence of some gaps in data available from the ministries regarding the surveillance and collection areas of wild animals with feral dogs. The risk assessment outcome for H5N1 AI indicated a low likelihood estimate with moderate uncertainty level. The impact estimate for H5N1 AI in Jordan is moderate with a low level of uncertainty. Conclusions The tripartite JRA OT provides a helpful and easy to follow guide to bring together expertise and information from all relevant sectors to jointly assess risks from zoonotic diseases and contributes to the understanding and management of shared threats at the human–animal–environment interface. Elsevier 2022-11-01 /pmc/articles/PMC9754930/ /pubmed/36532668 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.onehlt.2022.100453 Text en © 2022 Published by Elsevier B.V. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/igo/This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/igo/).
spellingShingle Research Paper
Abutarbush, Sameeh M.
Hamdallah, Alaa
Hawawsheh, Majid
Alsawalha, Lora
Elizz, Nour Abu
Dodeen, Rachel
Mousa, Ayman Bani
Alhawarat, Mohammad N.
Hailat, Ekhlas
Mahrous, Heba
Implementation of one health approach in Jordan: Joint risk assessment of rabies and avian influenza utilizing the tripartite operational tool
title Implementation of one health approach in Jordan: Joint risk assessment of rabies and avian influenza utilizing the tripartite operational tool
title_full Implementation of one health approach in Jordan: Joint risk assessment of rabies and avian influenza utilizing the tripartite operational tool
title_fullStr Implementation of one health approach in Jordan: Joint risk assessment of rabies and avian influenza utilizing the tripartite operational tool
title_full_unstemmed Implementation of one health approach in Jordan: Joint risk assessment of rabies and avian influenza utilizing the tripartite operational tool
title_short Implementation of one health approach in Jordan: Joint risk assessment of rabies and avian influenza utilizing the tripartite operational tool
title_sort implementation of one health approach in jordan: joint risk assessment of rabies and avian influenza utilizing the tripartite operational tool
topic Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9754930/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36532668
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.onehlt.2022.100453
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