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Mission One health Policies/Procedures that impact human animal and

strategic ecological health


plan/area focus

FAO the eradication Advocacy


http://www.fao.or of hunger, Combat Capacity development
g/ h1n1 Immidiate action
docrep/014/al86 food insecurity Strenghthe
8e/ and malnutrition; n
al868e00.pdf surveillanc
the elimination e
of poverty and Understan
the driving d disease
forward of risk factor
economic and Develop
capacity
Safe
animal
production

OIE Transparency WHO-OIE Deciphering OIEs standard setting process


Operational http://www.oie.int/
Ensure Framework for fileadmin/Home/eng/
transparency in Good Media_Center/docs/
the global animal governance at pdf/Key_Documents/
disease situation the human- COMMODITIES-EN.pdf
animal interface:
Scientific Bridging WHO Deciphering OIE Animal Disease Reports
information and OIE tools for
the assessment FAO/OIE/WHO fact sheet on the fight
of national against rabies
Collect, analyse capacities
and disseminate FAO/OIE/WHO factsheet on the fight
veterinary against antimicrobial resistance
scientific FAO/OIE/WHO
information Tripartite
Alliance FAO/OIE/WHO factsheet on zoonotic influenza
International (coming soon)
solidarity
Four-Way Linking Project for Assessing Health Risks at
Encourage the Human-Animal Interface
international
solidarity in the OIE-PVS One Health Pilots
control of animal
diseases
OFFLU

Sanitary safety Laboratory Capacity Building and Networking

Safeguard world OIE Global Conference on Wildlife Animal Health and Biodiversity, Paris
(France), 23-25 February 2011
trade by Access the website / Read the recommendations
publishing health
standards for Second Global Conference of OIE Reference Laboratories and Collaborating
international Centres, Paris (France), 21-23 June 2010
Recommendations / Presentations
trade in animals
and animal Second FAO/OIE/WHO joint scientific consultation on Influenza and other
products Emerging Zoonotic Diseases at the human-animal interface, Verona (Italy), 27-29 April
2010

Promotion of Operationalizing "One Health": A Policy Perspective - Taking Stock and


veterinary Shaping an Implementation Roadmap, Stone Mountain (United States of America), 4-
services 6 May 2010

High Level Technical Meeting to Address Health Risks at the Human-Animal-


Improve the legal Ecosystems Interfaces - 15-17 November 2011, Mexico City, Mexico
framework and
Preliminary Summary / Executive Summary / Full report
resources of
national
Veterinary Joint WHO/FAO/OIE assessment of community-level risk of zoonotic avian
influenza H5N1 infections - Project Report - October 2012
Services

Promotion of
veterinary
services

Improve the legal
framework and
resources of
national
Veterinary
Services

WHO Our goal is to "- Plan: Effective "Cost effectiveness and strategic planning (WHO-
build a better, strategies for CHOICE)
healthier future improving ""- providing leadership on matters critical to health
for people all national, regional and engaging in partnerships where joint action is
over the world. and community needed;
Working through level - shaping the research agenda and stimulating the
offices in more pandemic generation, translation and dissemination of valuable
than 150 preparedness knowledge;
countries, WHO and response -setting norms and standards and promoting and
staff work side should be further monitoring their implementation;
by side with developed or articulating ethical and evidence-based policy
governments refined. options;
and other This tripartite - providing technical support, catalysing change, and
partners to relationship building sustainable institutional capacity; and
ensure the envisages - monitoring the health situation and assessing health
highest complementary trends."
attainable level work to develop
of health for all normative
people. standards and
field programs to
Together we achieve
strive to combat One Health
diseases goals."
infectious
diseases like "- Areas/Focus:
influenza and HIV Communicable
and diseases
noncommunicabl WHO is working
e ones like with countries to
cancer and heart increase and
disease. We help sustain access to
mothers and prevention,
children survive treatment and
and thrive so care for HIV,
they can look tuberculosis,mal
forward to a aria and
healthy old age. neglected
We ensure the tropical diseases
safety of the air and to reduce
people breathe, vaccine-
the food they preventable
eat, the water diseases. MDG 6
they drink and (combat
the medicines HIV/AIDS,malaria
and vaccines and other
they need. diseases) has
driven
remarkable
progress but
much work
remains."
"The three organizations recognize a joint responsibility for addressing zoonotic and other high impact diseases
and have been working together for several decades to minimize the health, social and economic impact from
diseases arising at the human-animal interface by preventing, detecting, controlling, eliminating or managing
disease risks to humans originating directly or indirectly from domestic or wild animals. FAO, OIE and WHO have
created governance structures, established early warning systems and developed mechanisms to enhance
coordination and support member countries. "

"The three agencies collaborate to advance their own normative and standard scopesetting. For instance, WHO
and FAO participate in OIEs ad hoc thematic and working group meetings (e.g. OIE Working Group on Animal
Production Food Safety). WHO contributes to FAOs work on reducing biological safety risks, and OIE contributes
to the Codex Alimentarius Commission (CAC) and its subsidiary bodies work (Joint FAO/ WHO Food Standards
Programme) for food, animal and health aspects prior to processing and marketing guidance to norms that
assist in food safety and food-borne pathogens."

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