| Literature DB >> 32685999 |
Amanda M Berrian1,2, Michael Wilkes1,3, Kirsten Gilardi1, Woutrina Smith1, Patricia A Conrad1,4, Paulina Zielinska Crook1,4, James Cullor5, Thierry Nyatanyi6, Martin H Smith5, Rudovick Kazwala7, Jonna A K Mazet8.
Abstract
The One Health approach has gained support across a range of disciplines; however, training opportunities for professionals seeking to operationalize the interdisciplinary approach are limited. Academic institutions, through the development of high-quality, experiential training programs that focus on the application of professional competencies, can increase accessibility to One Health education. The Rx One Health Summer Institute, jointly led by US and East African partners, provides a model for such a program. In 2017, 21 participants representing five countries completed the Rx One Health program in East Africa. Participants worked collaboratively with communities neighboring wildlife areas to better understand issues impacting human and animal health and welfare, livelihoods, and conservation. One Health topics were explored through community engagement and role-playing exercises, field-based health surveillance activities, laboratories, and discussions with local experts. Educational assessments reflected improvements in participants' ability to apply the One Health approach to health and disease problem solving, as well as anticipate cross-sectoral challenges to its implementation. The experiential learning method, specifically the opportunity to engage with local communities, proved to be impactful on participants' cultural awareness. The Rx One Health Summer Institute training model may provide an effective and implementable strategy by which to contribute to the development of a global One Health workforce.Entities:
Keywords: Competency-based curriculum; Experiential learning; Interprofessional education; One Health; Professional development; Program evaluation
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32685999 PMCID: PMC7471195 DOI: 10.1007/s10393-020-01481-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ecohealth ISSN: 1612-9202 Impact factor: 3.184
Rx One Health Summer Institute Curricular Themes, Learning Objectives, and Examples of Planned Learning Experiences.
| Curriculum thematic areas | Learning objectives | Examples of learning experience (location) |
|---|---|---|
| Theme 1: One Health foundations | Define One Health as an organizing principle and list advantages of a One Health approach to problem solving compared to traditional siloed approaches | Discussion: An introduction to One Health as an organizing principle, perspective, and approach (T) |
| Identify core competencies for One Health practitioners compared to traditional content experts | Activity: Developing a professional standard for one health practitioners (T) | |
| Describe advantages and challenges to implementing a One Health approach to problem solving considering local context | Case study: Health for Animals and Livelihood Improvement (HALI) Project (Mazet et al. | |
| Draw a diagram to demonstrate the content areas at the intersection of One Health providers | Discussion: Collaboration, networking, and creativity—what really powers global health innovation (T) | |
| Theme 2: Zoonotic disease | Describe the role of the physical environment (landscape, water availability, climate change, etc.) on pathogen transmission at the human–animal–environment interface | Discussion: Global infectious disease and environmental policy from an African perspective (T) |
| Describe the role of social and cultural beliefs and traditions on pathogen transmission at the human–animal–environment interface | Stakeholder engagement: Maasai household (T) | |
| Identify risks to food safety and security caused by emerging and re-emerging infectious disease. | Field exercise: Village Poultry Biosecurity (diagnostic testing, vaccination) and Tour of Veterinary Investigation Centre (T) | |
| Outline an approach to One Health surveillance of diseases and list barriers to its implementation | Discussion: Control and surveillance for zoonotic diseases and diseases of economic importance in livestock (T) | |
| Describe ways in which social determinants of health and well-being (e.g., poverty, war, drought) can impact One Health problems | Tour/stakeholder engagement: Mtera fishing community (T) | |
| Theme 3: Wildlife health and stakeholder engagement | For a given One Health problem, identify key stakeholders at the local, national, regional, and global levels and attempt to anticipate their concerns | Discussion: Value chain and stakeholder analysis for smallholder agricultural producers (T) |
| Describe the role of rural/indigenous peoples in the management of wildlife and environmental health | Stakeholder engagement: Ruaha Carnivore Project, wildlife connection (T) and gorilla doctors (R) | |
| Compare One Health implications in varied ecosystems (e.g., terrestrial vs. marine ecosystems) | Case study: Current health concerns in Ruaha National Park (T) | |
| Describe a process to inform and engage stakeholders, including ways to demonstrate cultural sensitivity, professionalism, and open-mindedness | Stakeholder engagement with community health workers and dairy cow owners (R) | |
| Demonstrate communication skills for effective community engagement | Activity: Communicating perspective with “Zoom” group exercise (T) | |
| Theme 4: Research methods and education | Safely trap and collect biological samples from live wildlife | Field exercise: Wildlife health surveillance (bats, rodents, giraffes) and non-invasive sampling (non-human primates) in Ruaha National Park (T) |
| List four research approaches that are used in One Health and describe the advantages and limitations of each | Discussion: Community-based research methods (T) | |
| Design and conduct a community-based research plan to study a One Health problem | Field exercise: Design a qualitative research plan to identify ways to protect gorillas from local destruction of environment and from ecotourism transmission of human diseases (R) | |
| Describe the tenants of adult learning and apply them to engage a community around a One Health project | Field exercise: Observe Rwanda’s attempt to reduce transmission of HIV (R) | |
| Theme 5: One Health policy, systems, and solutions | Describe existing government infrastructure that is responsible for monitoring health problems and list the advantages and disadvantages | Tour/Discussion: Ifakara Health Institute and Public Health Research (T) |
| Outline the advantages of having government develop policies to manage One Health problems using an integrated, centralized, multi-disciplinary approach | Case Study: Emerging and zoonotic infectious diseases and outbreak management (T) | |
| Evaluate an existing government policy using evidence to support your perspective using a SWOT approach | Activity: Role of government in promoting dairy consumption by small families (R) | |
| Develop an iterative learning approach to innovation and provide a specific, practical, acceptable, measurable solution to a One Health problem (e.g., human–wildlife conflict, food quality/safety, zoonotic disease transmission) | Activity: Brainstorm and discuss with experts and community members problems, solutions, and potential barriers to address the domestic animal/wildlife interface while promoting economic growth for local communities (R) |
T Tanzania.
R Rwanda.
SWOT Strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, threats.
Participant Ideas of Professional Responsibilities for One Health Practitioners Before (Pre) and After (Post) Participating in the Rx One Health Summer Institute.
| Pre-training | Post-training | |
|---|---|---|
| Participant 1 | “Use my knowledge and skills to promote the health of humans, animals, and environment” | “Encourage and promote good collaboration and good communication among different disciplines in order to achieve the global well-being of humans, animals, and environment” |
| Participant 2 | “Use my skills for benefit of community” | “No single person, discipline, ministries can be able to address complex health challenges” |
| Participant 3 | “Use my knowledge of One Health to protect humans, animals, and the environment” | “Promote open communication and collaboration between disciplines, particularly in regards to the health and well-being of humans, animals, and the environment” |
| Participant 4 | “Use my knowledge, skills, and understanding to advance the health of communities” | “Discover and learn about the challenges faced by all individuals with a stake in a community, as well as the community’s existing strengths and assets” “Foremost engage and collaborate with the community, never losing sight of the fact that this is their community” |
Retrospective Self-Efficacy Assessment of Rx One Health Summer Institute Participants, Using Five-Point Scale (1 = Poor, 2 = Fair, 3 = Neutral, 4 = Good, 5 = Excellent).
| Pre-training mean (SD) | Post-training mean (SD) | Mean difference (95% CL) | Paired | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Understanding of One Health core competencies | 3.16 (0.69) | 4.58 (0.51) | 1.42 (1.13–1.71) | |
| Understanding of pathogen transmission dynamics at the human–animal–environment interface | 3.26 (0.99) | 4.37 (0.60) | 1.11 (0.83–1.38) | |
| Ability to identify and work across stakeholder types | 2.53 (0.61) | 4.16 (0.69) | 1.63 (1.3–1.96) | |
| Understanding of community-based research and engagement within a One Health framework | 2.67 (1.03) | 4.56 (0.62) | 1.89 (1.48–2.3) | |
| Ability to create and deliver effective One Health messaging | 2.79 (0.79) | 4.11 (0.74) | 1.32 (1.04–1.6) | |
| Understanding of wildlife health monitoring methods | 2.42 (0.96) | 4.05 (0.4) | 1.63 (1.2–2.06) | |
| Ability to apply a One Health approach to health and disease problem solving | 3.05 (0.91) | 4.53 (0.61) | 1.47 (1.18–1.77) | |
| Understanding of disease surveillance | 2.95 (1.03) | 4.37 (0.68) | 1.42 (0.96–1.88) | t(18) = 6.44, |
| Understanding of challenges to the implementation of the One Health approach | 2.26 (0.87) | 4.42 (0.51) | 2.16 (1.83–2.49) | t(18) = 13.67, |
SD standard deviation.
CL confidence limit of the mean.
df degrees of freedom.