Filter
230
Text search:
zoonotic
influenza
Featured
Recommendations
30
New Publications
46
Language
Document type
No document type
82
Guidelines
57
Studies & Reports
46
Strategic & Response Plan
24
Manuals
13
Fact sheets
5
Training Material
1
Situation Updates
1
Online Courses
1
Countries / Regions
Global
16
Liberia
7
Africa
7
Sierra Leone
6
Uganda
5
India
5
South Africa
5
Nepal
4
Tanzania
4
Rwanda
4
South–East Asia Region
4
Nigeria
3
Ethiopia
3
Ghana
3
Kenya
3
Bangladesh
3
East and Southern Africa
3
Guinea
2
Philippines
2
Germany
2
Brazil
2
Ecuador
2
West and Central Africa
2
Western Pacific Region
2
Western and Central Europe
2
USA
1
Cameroon
1
Zimbabwe
1
Zambia
1
China
1
Ukraine
1
Botswana
1
Madagascar
1
Middle East and North Africa
1
Latin America and the Carribbean
1
Eastern Europe and Central Asia
1
Asia
1
Qatar
1
Australia
1
Denmark
1
France
1
Authors & Publishers
Publication Years
Category
Countries
65
Clinical Guidelines
18
Key Resources
18
Public Health
17
Women & Child Health
5
Pharmacy & Technologies
4
Capacity Building
3
Toolboxes
Rapid Response
46
COVID-19
45
Planetary Health
36
AMR
14
Ebola
10
Global Health Education
10
NTDs
10
Conflict
4
TB
2
Specific Hazards
2
Pharmacy
2
Health Financing Toolbox
2
Natural Hazards
1
Refugee
1
Zika
1
Mental Health
1
To guide One Health capacity building efforts in the Republic of Guinea in the wake of the 2014–2016 Ebola virus disease (EVD) outbreak, we sought to identify and assess the existing systems and structures for zoonotic disease detection and contro
...
This checklist is an operational tool to help national authorities develop or revise national respiratory pathogen (inclusive of influenza and coronaviruses) pandemic preparedness plans.
First published in 2020, this toolkit is intended for clinicians working in acute care, managing adult and paediatric patients with acute respiratory infection, including severe pneumonia, acute respiratory distress syndrome, sepsis and septic shock. The main objective is to provide key tools for us
...
The strategic plan reflects shared commitments to enhance collaboration between environmental, animal (wildlife and domestic) and human health, and building new One Health workforce capacity through higher institutions of learning. The strategy also outlines interventions to be undertaken by governm
...
The 20th century was a period of unprecedented ecological change, with dramatic reductions in natural ecosystems and biodiversity and equally dramatic increases in people and domestic animals. Never before have so many animals been kept by so many people—and never before have so many opportunities
...
Despite the human and economic impact of viral epidemics, the world is not well enough prepared for the next emerging viral outbreak. Global trends indicate that new microbial threats will continue to emerge at an accelerating rate, driven by our growing population, expanded travel and trade network
...
The Global Health Security Agenda programme develops national capacity to prevent zoonotic and non-zoonotic diseases while quickly and effectively detecting and controlling diseases when they do eme
...
Mission report: June 11-20, 2017
Bioethics 519 (online) doi:10.1111/bioe.12145 Volume 29 Number 8 2015 pp. 488–596;
Pandemic plans recommend phases of response to an emergent infectious disease (EID) outbreak, and are primarily aimed at preventing and mitigating human-to-human transmission. These plans carry presumptive weight
...
Leptospirosis is a zoonotic disease with epidemic potential, especially after a heavy rainfall,
caused by a bacterium called Leptospira. Leptospira interrogans is pathogenic to humans and
animals, with more than 200 serologic variants or serovars.
...
Wet markets have been implicated in multiple zoonotic outbreaks, including COVID-19. They are also a conduit for legal and illegal trade in wildlife, which threatens thousands of species. Yet wet markets supply food to millions of people around the
...
The Quadripartite Organizations – the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), the World Organisation for Animal Health (WOAH, founded as OIE), and the World Health Organization (WHO) – collaborate to drive the change and tra
...
The desired impact of the OH JPA is a world better able to prevent, predict, detect and
respond to health threats and improve the health of humans, animals, plants and the
environment while contributing to sustainable development. The OH JPA aims to work
towards this vision in the following way:
...
Infectious diseases continue to impose unpredictable burdens on global health and economies, a subject that requires constant research and updates. In this sense, the objective of the present article was to review studies on the role of wild animals as reservoirs and/or dispersers of etiological age
...
Epidemics of infectious diseases are occurring more often, and spreading faster and further than ever, in many different regions of the world. The background factors of this threat are biological, environmental and lifestyle changes, among others. A potentially fatal combination of newly-discovered
...