PERSPECTIVE
published: 30 October 2020
doi: 10.3389/fvets.2020.578649
Reflecting on One Health in Action
During the COVID-19 Response
Barbara Häsler 1*, William Bazeyo 2 , Andrew W. Byrne 3† , Marta Hernandez-Jover 4,5 ,
Simon J. More 6 , Simon R. Rüegg 7 , Ofir Schwarzmann 8 , Jeff Wilson 9 and Agnes Yawe 2
1
Department of Pathobiology and Population Sciences, Royal Veterinary College, Veterinary Epidemiology Economics and
Public Health Group, Hatfield, United Kingdom, 2 Africa One Health University Network (AFROHUN)‡ , Makerere University,
Kampala, Uganda, 3 One-Health Scientific Support Unit, Department of Agriculture, Food, and The Marine, Government of
Ireland, Celbridge, Ireland, 4 Faculty of Science, School of Animal and Veterinary Sciences, Charles Sturt University, Wagga
Wagga, NSW, Australia, 5 Graham Centre for Agricultural Innovation (NSW Department of Primary Industries and Charles
Sturt University), Wagga Wagga, NSW, Australia, 6 Centre for Veterinary Epidemiology and Risk Analysis, School of Veterinary
Medicine, University College Dublin (UCD), Dublin, Ireland, 7 Section of Epidemiology, Vetsuisse Faculty, University of Zurich,
Zurich, Switzerland, 8 Biosecurity and Food Safety, New South Wales Department of Primary Industries, Orange, NSW,
Australia, 9 Novometrix Research Inc., Moffat, ON, Canada
Edited by:
Andres M. Perez,
University of Minnesota Twin Cities,
United States
Reviewed by:
Gareth Enticott,
Cardiff University, United Kingdom
Barbara Brito,
University of Technology
Sydney, Australia
*Correspondence:
Barbara Häsler
[email protected]
† ORCID:
Andrew W. Byrne
orcid.org/0000-0003-0296-4586
‡ Formerly
One Health Central and
Eastern Africa (OHCEA)
Specialty section:
This article was submitted to
Veterinary Epidemiology and
Economics,
a section of the journal
Frontiers in Veterinary Science
Received: 30 June 2020
Accepted: 10 September 2020
Published: 30 October 2020
Citation:
Häsler B, Bazeyo W, Byrne AW,
Hernandez-Jover M, More SJ,
Rüegg SR, Schwarzmann O, Wilson J
and Yawe A (2020) Reflecting on One
Health in Action During the COVID-19
Response. Front. Vet. Sci. 7:578649.
doi: 10.3389/fvets.2020.578649
The COVID-19 pandemic, a singular disruptive event in recent human history, has
required rapid, innovative, coordinated and collaborative approaches to manage and
ameliorate its worst impacts. However, the threat remains, and learning from initial
efforts may benefit the response management in the future. One Health approaches
to managing health challenges through multi-stakeholder engagement are underscored
by an enabling environment. Here we describe three case studies from state (New
South Wales, Australia), national (Ireland), and international (sub-Saharan Africa) scales
which illustrate different aspects of One Health in action in response to the COVID-19
pandemic. In Ireland, a One Health team was assembled to help parameterise complex
mathematical and resource models. In New South Wales, state authorities engaged
collaboratively with animal health veterinarians and epidemiologists to leverage disease
outbreak knowledge, expertise and technical and support structures for application to
the COVID-19 emergency. The African One Health University Network linked members
from health institutions and universities from eight countries to provide a virtual platform
knowledge exchange on COVID-19 to support the response. Themes common to
successful experiences included a shared resource base, interdisciplinary engagement,
communication network strategies, and looking global to address local need. The One
Health approaches used, particularly shared responsibility and knowledge integration, are
benefiting the management of this pandemic and future One Health global challenges.
Keywords: SARS-CoV-2, One Health, infectious disease epidemiology, collaborative networks, community
network integration, knowledge integration
INTRODUCTION
The scope and impact of the COVID-19 pandemic is unprecedented in modern times.
At the time of writing, over 10 million confirmed human cases and 0.5 million deaths
from SARS-CoV-2 infection have been reported (1), and the global community is facing
enormous challenges. In these circumstances, an effective response is complex, requiring
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coherent and collaborative engagement by multiple stakeholders
across a diverse network. In a pandemic, a country on its own has
limited possibilities, particularly when dealing with a new threat
and limited knowledge of its consequences and how to mitigate
it; a linking of national priorities and global disease governance
is critical (2). For example, knowledge needs to be shared about
effective treatments, disease epidemiology including risk factors,
people’s reaction to measures and effective testing protocols,
among others.
One Health is very relevant to the current pandemic. It
is concerned with interactions and dependencies in complex
systems and promotes a sustainability-oriented approach of
health (3) that brings together natural and social sciences
and is characterized by collaboration, participation, sharing
and exchange in a framework of knowledge integration
in health (4). A key feature is the concept of shared
responsibility, with the potential for innovative and nonuniform solutions to manage complex problems (5). For
example, shared responsibility is used as a collaborative approach
to biosecurity management across multiple stakeholders with
diverse and complementary perspectives, knowledge and realities
to produce robust and prepared biosecurity systems (6). The
management and governance of complex biosecurity issues,
including prevention, preparedness, detection, response and
recovery, is coordinated and shared across government agencies,
industry organizations, users and the broader community (7, 8).
A clear definition and shared understanding of the concept,
including roles and responsibilities, and a consistent and
appropriately resourced coordination throughout the system are
needed to form true and effective partnerships (9, 10). A shared
responsibility approach, agreed upon during peacetime, could
support the management of any complex health issue, such as
the COVID-19 pandemic, and be implemented at different levels
(local, regional, national and international).
The implementation of a partnership approach does not come
without its challenges. Knowledge integration and particularly
the sharing of data is impacted by political boundaries, as shown
in previous evaluations of One Health initiatives (11). Further,
sectoral and disciplinary silos constitute an impediment to the
ability of stakeholders to mount a timely and effective outbreak
response. In such systems, there is potential to improve the
efficiency of information flow and knowledge exchange and
integration. Traditionally, in the various health sectors, solutions
are often prescribed top-down, implying singular linear pathways
in isolated aspects of health, whereas health agency and shared
responsibility approaches may be more suitable when dealing
with unpredictability, uncertainty, and ambiguity.
A recent promising approach to support such collaborative
approaches and implement shared responsibility in practice is
called Community Network Integration. It aligns distributed
networks under a common leadership and collaborative
governance framework including means to identify and engage
appropriate expertise, human resources and co-funding in
order to execute priority scalable solutions-oriented (pilot)
projects. The approach also integrates a systems approach to
project management, communication, and data integration
as well as novel application of principles of social psychology
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to engage stakeholders and create a culture of high emotional
energy vital to collaboration and creative problem solving (12).
Thereby, it operationalises the essential dimensions of One
Health that include (1) systemic thinking, (2) holistic planning,
and (3) transdisciplinary working, supported by an enabling
environment to allow for (4) sharing, and (5) learning, endorsed
through (6) a systemic organization (13).
In this article, we use three case studies from different
world regions to discuss elements of One Health approaches
in the COVID-19 response. The three case studies are based
on the authors’ experiences and illustrate which of the
essential One Health dimensions listed above applied in practice
during the crisis. They provide examples of collaboration,
shared responsibility and knowledge integration and illustrate
opportunities and weaknesses.
CASE STUDIES
Case Study 1: COVID-19 Modeling Support
in the Republic of Ireland: A Case-Study of
Rapid Response Demonstrating the Value
to Utilizing Cross-Disciplinary Actors
Toward a Common Goal
In Ireland, the National Public Health Emergency Team
(NPHET) was established on 27 January 2020, to provide national
direction, support and expert advice on the development and
implementation of a strategy to contain COVID-19 (14). The
first confirmed COVID-19 case in Ireland was reported on 29
February, the Special Cabinet Committee on COVID-19 was
formed on 3 March, and a National Action Plan was published
on 16 March.
NPHET was supported by a number of expert groups,
including the Epidemiological Modeling Advisory Group
(IEMAG), which was established on 7 March [(15); see
Supplementary Figure 1]. IEMAG was tasked with developing
capacity for mathematical modeling (epidemiological,
demand/supply, geospatial) to enable real time modeling of
COVID-19 in the Irish population, drawing on expertise in
relevant disciplines from government agencies and universities
throughout Ireland. Here we focus on the epidemiological
parameters team within the IEMAG epidemiological modeling
subgroup, which was tasked with gathering evidence on key
characteristics of COVID-19. An important remit of the team
was to link biological understanding with technical quantitative
skills to improve the building of mathematical and statistical
models and help communicate effectively the findings to NPHET
and other stakeholders.
The requirement for a rapid response led to a broad
call to action from stakeholders with various expertise to
contribute, in some cases beyond the traditional human medical
disciplines. The team was chaired by a veterinary epidemiologist,
with interdisciplinary membership from human public health,
agriculture, veterinary medicine, food safety, disease ecology,
and One Health backgrounds. Initial team selection was
guided by disciplinary expertise, full-time availability (at short
notice) and prior working relationships. The group’s diverse
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readiness also started. On 25 January, Australia reported its
first case of COVID-19, and the Australian Health Sector
Emergency Response Plan for Novel Coronavirus (COVID-19
Plan) was implemented on 7 February (23). The COVID-19
Plan acknowledges that the primary responsibility for managing
the impact of the outbreak lies with the state and territory
governments (24). In New South Wales (NSW), the NSW
State Emergency Management Plan (EMPLAN) and the NSW
Human Influenza Pandemic Plan (sub-plan to EMPLAN) were
implemented (24, 25).
Early in the response, a One Health approach was
implemented through the collaborative engagement of animal
health experts, including veterinarians and epidemiologists,
from NSW Department of Primary Industries (DPI) and other
institutions (e.g., universities, consultants), sharing expert
knowledge. This approach is pre-defined by EMPLAN, under
which a Combat Agency is nominated to lead operations (in this
case, the Ministry of Health) and able to request support from
other government areas, such as the NSW DPI. Animal health
specialists worked for the Public Health Emergency Operations
Center, responsible for activities such as tracing, research
and providing expert advice, in the epidemiology and tracing
units. In addition, the Ministry of Health liaised with other
government agencies to establish remote tracing capabilities,
including sharing of databases, online training and debriefs (due
to the travel limitations) and the need to increase contact tracing
capacity. As the responsible agency for providing agriculture
and animal support during emergencies (under EMPLAN),
NSW DPI as the Agriculture and Animal Services Functional
Area was present within the State Emergency Operations Center
throughout the response, liaising with health services with
respect to animal care. Furthermore, the NSW state animal
laboratory provided diagnostic services to NSW Health. NSW
DPI worked with Australia’s Animal Health Committee (AHC)
to develop science-based, nationally consistent policy on animal
health issues related to COVID-19, and supported the agriculture
and animal sectors in achieving continuity of their businesses to
safeguard animal health and welfare and help ensure a secure
food supply (26). AHC developed and implemented policies,
operational strategies, risk assessments and communications
around SARS CoV-2 and animals and managing Emergency
Animal Diseases (EAD) during human pandemics.
As key learning of this response, COVID-19 highlighted the
importance of a well-resourced response using a One Health
approach, involving a broad range of human and animal health
stakeholders and shared resources, which could then be scaled
back as needed. The COVID-19 situation also highlighted the
need for appropriate communication and management of animal
health and welfare during human pandemics.
interests and skills were well-suited to rapidly gathering
evidence, and undertaking quantitative secondary and metaanalyses, in response to the emerging threat (16–22). In the
context of IEMAG, the multidisciplinary One Health team
were able to ensure that the national mathematical models
were underpinned by robust biological understandings, both
during model development and evaluation. This was particularly
important in the context of model fitting to emerging datasets,
where the evidence base, and basic understanding of the
epidemiology of the pathogen, was rapidly changing. Due to
the rapid and changing needs of modelers, the composition and
focus on tasks by the subgroup was dynamic, with members
requiring to pivot from one parameter to another. In addition,
the expertise and experience of the national Health Information
and Quality Authority (HIQA), and researchers with particular
skills (e.g., virology) were sought and contributed to the network,
as required. Throughout, advice from international expertise
(e.g., World Health Organization, European Center Disease
for Disease Prevention and Control) were monitored and
incorporated into IEMAG’s work.
In terms of lessons learned, the rapid community-based
aggregation of skills applied to a single acute problem should
be held as an exemplar of how a distributed network of
expertise can contribute in an efficient and effective way toward
a goal. Interdisciplinary synergies were central to progress, both
between mathematics and the life sciences and, importantly,
between medical and allied disciplines. One Health perspectives
predominated and there was cross-pollination of ideas and
skills across disciplines to achieve efficiencies and better,
more dynamic, systems. Challenges included remote working
while maintaining communication and ensuring there was no
duplication of effort across various NPHET subgroup teams.
Furthermore, given the finite resources available, the COVID-19
response led to a temporary diversion of expertise and resource
from other aspects of national animal health management. This
case study is an important example of new thinking, diversity of
thought, and new networks of expertise within Ireland.
Case Study 2: A State Level One Health
Approach to Respond to COVID-19:
Perspectives From the New South Wales
Department of Primary Industries
On 21 January 2020, the Australian Chief Medical Officer
(CMO) issued a determination adding “human coronavirus
with pandemic potential” to the Biosecurity (Listed Human
Diseases) Determination 2016. As a result, the Australian
Health Protection Principal Committee, the key decision-making
committee for health emergencies formed by the CMO and
state and territory Chief Health Officers, was convened and
daily meetings activated. In addition, national coordination
was also activated for responding to the health emergency
through the National Incident Room, the strategic reserve of
personal protective equipment through the National Medical
Stockpile and the provision of clinical and academic leadership
through the National Trauma Center. Meetings of state, territory
and Commonwealth health ministers to discuss pandemic
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Case Study 3: One Health in Action:
Experiences From the Africa One Health
University Network (AFROHUN) COVID-19
Knowledge Sharing Response
The Africa One Health University Network (AFROHUN),
formerly One Health Central and Eastern Africa (OHCEA)
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is a University led network of 24 public health, veterinary
medicine, pathobiology and environmental health institutions
and 16 universities in eight countries in East, Central and West
African regions (Cameroon, Democratic Republic of Congo,
Ethiopia, Kenya, Rwanda, Senegal, Tanzania, and Uganda). Since
its inception in 2010, AFROHUN supports institutional changes
in teaching and learning environments in higher institutions that
promote One Health approaches.
In the absence of a global workforce, most African
national COVID-19 response actions relied on national health
professionals to provide the much-needed workforce in the
management of the pandemic. Universities were among the
key institutions that supported different national response task
forces. University members served on scientific task forces with
evidence-based and science-based data shaping response strategy
options as the mainstream health workforce within ministries
were at the forefront of the response.
Between 23 March 2020 and 18 June 2020, AFROHUN
through its wide continental network in collaboration with
the USAID-funded One Health Workforce – Next Generation
(OHW-NG) consortium led by University of California, Davis,
provided a platform where network members (faculty and
students), practitioners in One Health, and stakeholders virtually
via ECHO (Extension for Community Healthcare Outcomes1 )
sessions twice a month accessed the current information on
COVID-19 as it evolved. Expert presentations were made by
global and in-country teams and real issues and dynamics
experienced during response actions were discussed in an
interactive way. Selected topics for discussions were delivered
over three months by experts in infectious disease epidemiology,
human medicine, public health, environment and occupational
health, veterinary medicine, immunology and molecular biology,
among others, working at the forefront of the response at
country, regional and global levels. This provided expert
knowledge and experiences on COVID-19 to faculty and
practitioners during the webinars. The knowledge gained from
the webinars was appreciated by participants, some of whom used
it in their different roles in national COVID-19 response teams
while a number of faculty indicated readiness to use the rich
knowledge in their classes when teaching students. The sessions
were perceived to provide valuable knowledge that participants
used in their national duties on different COVID-19 task forces,
as illustrated by these quotes:
“During this period, we were discussing options to reshape
response measures in the surveillance commission because in
Kinshasa capital city cases were still rising. At that time, the
herd immunity theory that was discussed during the AFROHUN
COVID-19 session on immunity issues and interventions for
COVID-19. We learned more about it and about the advances
in vaccine development. This improved my knowledge, which I
shared, and helped us to focus on improving our testing capacities,
as there is no evidence supporting such a theory.” Dr. Marc
Yambayamba, AFROHUN country manager in DRC, member of
the national COVID-19 surveillance team.
“Based on knowledge we have gained on multidisciplinary
approaches in addressing health issues, we mobilized students
into One Health Student Club (SOHIC) and we have been active
in COVID-19. The club, a multidisciplinary team of students
from Makerere University and Mbarara University of Science
and Technology in Uganda have been raising awareness about
COVID-19 to communities and providing mental health support.”
Muganzi David Jolly, President, Students One Health Innovation
Club, Mbarara University of Science and Technology, Uganda.
“I was asked to lead a team that was responsible for advising
the government on the design and necessity for wearing cloth face
masks in crowded places such as bus stands, markets, hospitals
and places of warship. Now mask use is widespread as one of the
preventive actions against COVID 19. In my leadership role, I
have used some of the ideas from the AFROHUN ECHO sessions.”
Prof. Japhet Killewo, Professor of Epidemiology at Muhimbili
University of Health and Allied Sciences (MUHAS), Tanzania.
An AFROHUN internal review identified several lessons
learnt from the three months of COVID-19 sessions. The power
of existing platforms, strong leadership, the combination of
global and in-country perspectives and the ability of leveraging
networks was highlighted, with around 200 participants and
experts being part of the sessions, providing valuable multidisciplinary, global and local in-country perspectives. The tight
schedules of the task force members at the frontline of the
pandemic prevented engagement of mainstream ministries in
the design of the sessions. Participation of representatives from
government and members from different COVID-19 task forces
helped bridge this gap. Their perspectives on the issues and
dynamics of the pandemic helped to shape subsequent sessions.
A more efficient information flow in the national response system
to reach diverse users could have enhanced the design and
delivery of the sessions. Official engagement of specific task forces
such as the scientific committees on the ECHO sessions could
have added value.
DISCUSSION
The three case studies each demonstrate important benefits
from the use of One Health approaches in the management
of the COVID-19 pandemic. The sharing of resources,
multidisciplinary engagement and communication network
strategies were common across the three case studies, in
support of knowledge integration and more effective response
management. Each can be placed within a One Health framework
(13), providing examples of an effective engagement of expertise
and in-kind resources (e.g., labor, connectivity, materials) from
a broad range of relevant stakeholder groups. Moreover, they
illustrate One Health approaches within inclusive national and
local outbreak teams, including transparent use of information,
multi-way dialogue, information sharing, and the development
of solutions through collaborative learning.
With regards to the six One Health dimensions that are
described at the beginning of the paper, the three case studies
all had clear sharing and learning structures in place that
facilitated an exchange of data, information, and knowledge,
1 ECHO modelTM , https://echo.unm.edu/about-echo/model/
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dynamic learning facilities conducive to transparent knowledge
and data sharing, dialogue and innovation.
as well as accessing and generating new knowledge through
collaborative processes. All case studies described working
across disciplines, but remained within the boundaries of
the natural sciences and did not engage either the social
sciences or the humanities. Also, wider society engagement
was lacking, which meant that collaborative working remained
within the multi- and interdisciplinary spheres and did not
reach transdisciplinary working. Holistic planning was a key
feature of case study 2, which provided a strong basis for the
actions implemented. Systemic organization was dominant for
AFROHUN, with the existence of a large, formal network of
universities that allowed prompt recruitment of scientific experts
into the response. None of the case studies explicitly described
systemic thinking even though it is advocated by the WHO
(27) and the Association of Schools and Programs in Public
Health (28, 29). These case studies were conducted during
emergency situations where rapid and unequivocal instructions
and responses are demanded. In contrast, system thinking
requires that the problem is adequately formulated, the right
stakeholders are selected, a vast set of problem-solving options
are considered, boundaries are defined correctly, the approach
is systematic rather than focussed, and connections are not
ignored. Given the need for rapid responses, the resulting
“messiness” introduces uncertainty, and may unearth conflicts
in ethics, values, judgement and background experiences. In
addition, perspectives may change due to system dynamics which
pose additional challenges to public communication (30). This
may emphasize that these debates must take place as part of
the preparedness process if they should be operational in an
emergency situation.
The case studies have demonstrated how expertise can
be mobilized and shared quickly, given appropriate support
infrastructure and in the light of the pressing needs of the
pandemic. It is hoped that lessons learned can be extended
to “peacetime,” outside the crisis. Interdisciplinary synergies,
underpinned by One Health concepts, will also be needed to
manage critical global challenges, including those relating to
climate change and antimicrobial resistance (31). To harness
both the power of new thinking and networks of expertise,
it is recommended that preferred solutions are supported by
effective network-wide business systems (e.g., management,
financial, communications, IT, and human resources) and
DATA AVAILABILITY STATEMENT
The original contributions presented in the study are included
in the article/Supplementary Material, further inquiries can be
directed to the corresponding author/s.
AUTHOR CONTRIBUTIONS
BH, AB, and MH-J conceived the study. AB and SM wrote
the case study 1 (Ireland). MH-J and OS wrote the case
study 2 (NSW, Australia). WB and AY wrote the case
study 3 (AFROHUN). All authors contributed to developing,
writing, editing of the paper, and approved the manuscript
for publication.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
AB and SM wish to acknowledge the colleagues within the
Irish epidemiological parameter team (John Griffin, Conor
McAloon, Ann Barber, Patrick Wall, Francis Butler, Kevin Hunt,
Elizabeth Lane, David McEvoy, Áine Collins, Miriam Casey),
and colleagues at National University of Ireland Maynooth
(Philip Nolan, IEMAG Chair), University College Dublin (Gerald
Barry, Jamie Madden), University of Limerick (James Gleeson,
Cathal Walsh), National University of Ireland Galway (James
Duggan), DAFM (Damien Barrett), and the Health Information
and Quality Authority (Kirsty O’Brien, Kieran Walsh) who
contributed to the network.
SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIAL
The Supplementary Material for this article can be found
online at: https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fvets.
2020.578649/full#supplementary-material
Supplementary Figure 1 | Overview diagram of the structure of the National
Public Health Emergency Team (NPHET), including the broad stakeholder
composition demonstrating the interrelationship between government, public
health authorities, and academia in response to the COVID19 epidemic in Ireland.
CMO, Chief Medical Officer.
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Conflict of Interest: JW was employed by the company Novometrix Research Inc,
a social enterprise which facilitates alignment of diverse stakeholders for solutions
in economic, social and environmental sustainability. JW and Novometrix
Research have no financial interest in any aspect of this manuscript.
The remaining authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of
any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential
conflict of interest.
Copyright © 2020 Häsler, Bazeyo, Byrne, Hernandez-Jover, More, Rüegg,
Schwarzmann, Wilson and Yawe. This is an open-access article distributed under the
terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution
or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and
the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal
is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or
reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
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October 2020 | Volume 7 | Article 578649