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Socializing One Health: an innovative strategy to investigate social and behavioral risks of emerging viral threats

journal contribution
posted on 2023-04-26, 01:30 authored by Karen Saylors, David J Wolking, Emily Hagan, Stephanie Martinez, Leilani Francisco, Jason Euren, Sarah H Olson, Maureen Miller, Amanda E Fine, Nga Nguyen Thi Thanh, Phuc Tran Minh, Jusuf D Kalengkongan, Tina Kusumaningrum, Alice Latinne, Joko Pamungkas, Dodi Safari, Suryo Saputro, Djeneba Bamba, Kalpy Julien Coulibaly, Mireille Dosso, Anne Laudisoit, Kouassi Manzan N’guettia Jean, Shusmita Dutta, Ariful Islam, Shahanaj Shano, Mwokozi I Mwanzalila, Ian P Trupin, Aiah Gbakima, James Bangura, Sylvester T Yondah, Dibesh Karmacharya, Rima D Shrestha, Marcelle Annie Matsida Kamta, Mohamed Moctar Mouliom Mouiche, Hilarion Moukala Ndolo, Fabien Roch Niama, Dionne Onikrotin, Peter Daszak, Christine K Johnson, Jonna AK Mazet
AbstractIn an effort to strengthen global capacity to prevent, detect, and control infectious diseases in animals and people, the United States Agency for International Development’s (USAID) Emerging Pandemic Threats (EPT) PREDICT project funded development of regional, national, and local One Health capacities for early disease detection, rapid response, disease control, and risk reduction. From the outset, the EPT approach was inclusive of social science research methods designed to understand the contexts and behaviors of communities living and working at human-animal-environment interfaces considered high-risk for virus emergence. Using qualitative and quantitative approaches, PREDICT behavioral research aimed to identify and assess a range of socio-cultural behaviors that could be influential in zoonotic disease emergence, amplification, and transmission. This broad approach to behavioral risk characterization enabled us to identify and characterize human activities that could be linked to the transmission dynamics of new and emerging viruses. This paper provides a discussion of implementation of a social science approach within a zoonotic surveillance framework. We conducted in-depth ethnographic interviews and focus groups to better understand the individual- and community-level knowledge, attitudes, and practices that potentially put participants at risk for zoonotic disease transmission from the animals they live and work with, across 6 interface domains. When we asked highly-exposed individuals (ie. bushmeat hunters, wildlife or guano farmers) about the risk they perceived in their occupational activities, most did not perceive it to be risky, whether because it was normalized by years (or generations) of doing such an activity, or due to lack of information about potential risks. Integrating the social sciences allows investigations of the specific human activities that are hypothesized to drive disease emergence, amplification, and transmission, in order to better substantiate behavioral disease drivers, along with the social dimensions of infection and transmission dynamics. Understanding these dynamics is critical to achieving health security--the protection from threats to health-- which requires investments in both collective and individual health security. Involving behavioral sciences into zoonotic disease surveillance allowed us to push toward fuller community integration and engagement and toward dialogue and implementation of recommendations for disease prevention and improved health security.

History

Journal

One Health Outlook

Volume

3

Article number

11

Pagination

1-16

Location

Berlin, Germany

ISSN

2524-4655

eISSN

2524-4655

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Issue

1

Publisher

Springer

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