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Use of a systems approach and evidence-based One Health for zoonoses research.

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TLDR
The Cochrane Collaboration is the platform of choice to initiate a new group on zoonoses to carry out systematic meta‐analyses of diagnostic tests and drug efficacies without bias, thus underpinning the systems approach and One Health.
Abstract
The World Health Organization estimates that 25% of the 57 million annual deaths that occur globally are caused by microbes. A study reported 1415 species of infectious organisms are known to be pathogenic to humans. Zoonoses constitute 61% of all known infectious diseases, with humans serving as the primary reservoir for only 3% of them. Of the 175 infectious species considered to be emerging, 75% are zoonotic. Zoonotic diseases and their impact on human and animal health are not monitored, prevented, and treated in an integrated way, despite the fact that etiologies and treatments are similar across species. The efficacy and resistance of a drug in one species has a bearing on others, in the context of zoonoses. Further, an RCT involving many species is effective in a natural setting, is robust, and may require fewer human volunteers. One Health is based on a systems approach and a collaborative effort of multiple disciplines - working locally, nationally, and globally - to attain optimal health for people, animals, and the environment. Systematic reviews and meta-analyses have so far been independent and discipline oriented. Pooling of results for diagnostic test accuracies and treatment effects of drugs for zoonoses across species has to be done, since the results of preclinical trials emanate from laboratory animals. The Cochrane Collaboration is the platform of choice to initiate a new group on zoonoses to carry out systematic meta-analyses of diagnostic tests and drug efficacies without bias, thus underpinning the systems approach and One Health.

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Citations
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A review of the metrics for One Health benefits.

TL;DR: A review of the available literature and an examination of methods used concludes that most published work on One Health describes how this concept is valuable without trying to estimate the size of benefit or type of value.
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One health collaboration for a resilient health system in India: Learnings from global initiatives.

TL;DR: It is high time to develop a sustainable level-based collaboration integrated with third-party based collaboration within the larger domain of One Health for a resilient health system in India.
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One health: perspectives on ethical issues and evidence from animal experiments.

TL;DR: The One Health concept is a comparative, clinical approach directed towards zoonoses which present challenges to research workers and clinicians and the results should be complementary to both.
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‘One Health’ Actors in Multifaceted Health Systems: An Operational Case for India

TL;DR: It is concluded that not only collaboration is needed for OH among the sectors pertaining to the human and the animal health system but also better structured collaboration across the governance levels for effective implementation.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Evidence based medicine: what it is and what it isn't.

TL;DR: Evidence Based Medicine (IBM) as discussed by the authors is the conscientious, explicit, and judicious use of current best evidence in making decisions about the care of individual patients, which is a hot topic for clinicians, public health practitioners, purchasers, planners and the public.
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Risk factors for human disease emergence.

TL;DR: This study represents the first quantitative analysis identifying risk factors for human disease emergence, with protozoa and viruses particularly likely to emerge, and helminths particularly unlikely to do so, irrespective of their zoonotic status.
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A NEW APPROACH TO DECODING LIFE: Systems Biology

TL;DR: The emergence of systems biology is described, as well as several examples of specific systems approaches.
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Diseases of humans and their domestic mammals: pathogen characteristics, host range and the risk of emergence

TL;DR: A database of disease-causing pathogens of humans and domestic mammals was constructed and it was found that helminths and fungi were relatively unlikely to emerge whereas viruses, particularly RNA viruses, were highly likely to emerge.
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