The One Health Approach is a collaborative, multisectoral strategy that recognizes the interconnectedness of human, animal, and environmental health. It promotes cooperation among physicians, veterinarians, environmental scientists, and other stakeholders to address health threats, such as emerging diseases, antimicrobial resistance, and environmental hazards. By integrating knowledge and resources across disciplines, the One Health Approach aims to improve health outcomes, prevent disease transmission, and ensure sustainable ecosystems for current and future generations.
The One Health Approach is a collaborative, multisectoral strategy that recognizes the interconnectedness of human, animal, and environmental health. It promotes cooperation among physicians, veterinarians, environmental scientists, and other stakeholders to address health threats, such as emerging diseases, antimicrobial resistance, and environmental hazards. By integrating knowledge and resources across disciplines, the One Health Approach aims to improve health outcomes, prevent disease transmission, and ensure sustainable ecosystems for current and future generations.
What is the One Health Approach?
A collaborative, multisectoral strategy recognizing the links between human, animal, and environmental health, bringing professionals from medicine, veterinary science, environmental science, and other fields to work together.
Why is One Health important for pets and animals?
Many health threats cross species, including zoonotic diseases and antimicrobial resistance; protecting animal health helps protect people and ecosystems.
How does One Health help with emerging diseases?
By integrated surveillance, shared data, joint risk assessments, and coordinated responses across sectors to detect, prevent, and control new health threats early.
How can I support One Health in daily life?
Keep pets healthy with vaccines and regular veterinary care, practice good hygiene, use antibiotics only as prescribed, reduce environmental contamination, and stay informed about zoonotic risks.