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One Health
This collection draws together BSAVA resources on One Health: the increasingly important understanding of the link between human, animal and environmental health and wellbeing.
Updated 2025
Collection Contents
14 results
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One Health, One Team: Crossing boundaries - humans matter too
BSAVA Congress Proceedings 2025Authors: Adrienne Conroy, David Edwards and Simon Tappin- Insight into the work of UKHSA and Health Protection Teams (HPTs) regarding small animal zoonoses.
- How UKHSA HPTs and NHS colleagues manage potentially zoonotic cases involving small animals, veterinary staff and owners, and how all involved parties can best collaborate and communicate.
- How small animal vets in practice can contribute to the work of UKHSA as part of national zoonoses surveillance - they are the ‘eyes and ears’ on the ground.
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One Health, One Team: How to be Salmonella Savvy
BSAVA Congress Proceedings 2025Authors: Adrienne Conroy, Meg Rawlins and Lesley LarkinHow to be Salmonella Savvy
- The occurrence of salmonella and its relevance to small animal vets in practice, pet owners and pets.
- The legislation relating to salmonella and companion animals and, the obligations of vets in practice.
- The zoonotic potential of salmonella for vets and owners.
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One Health, One Team: Inward bound - travelling with extra baggage
BSAVA Congress Proceedings 2025Authors: Adrienne Conroy and Ian WrightInsights into parasitic incursion for the UK with a focus on zoonoses including the following:
- Leishmania
- Dirofilaria immitis & repens
- Thelazia callipaeda
- Lingulata serrrata
- Tick-borne encephalitis virus and Sporothrix
The speakers will also discuss routes and modes of incursion with a focus on imported dogs and cats and the impact of climate change. Looking at new and innovative ways to detect and monitor parasites and also, protect pets. In addition to this, we look at the impact of incursion on both animal health and public health within the UK animal and human populations.
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One Health, One Team: Parasiticides and the environment
BSAVA Congress Proceedings 2025Authors: Adrienne Conroy, Jonathan Newman and Francine FernandezParasiticides & the Environment
Overview of the work of the VMD, Parasiticides in the Environment (PiE) Group and Environment Agency (EA).
The evidence-base and recent research on veterinary therapeutic compounds and their potential impact on the environment.
The complexity of the stakeholder landscape.
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One Health, One Team: UK disease surveillance - your country needs you!
BSAVA Congress Proceedings 2025Authors: Adrienne Conroy, Eleanor Brown and Elizabeth Bruno-McClungUK Disease Surveillance: Your country needs you!
- National small animal disease surveillance and incursion, including new and emerging disease threats and zoonoses.
- The Small Animal Expert Group (SAEG) and its SmART comms system
- The role of small animal vets in practice in surveillance - the ‘eyes & ears’ on the ground, and how vets in small animal practice can get involved.
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One Health
BSAVA Manual of Practical Veterinary WelfareAuthors: Matthew Rendle and Becky JonesThe basic concept of One Health is that the health of people, animals and the environment are intrinsically linked at a local, national and global level. It is a concept that has gained momentum in recent years, owing to the impact of a rapidly growing human population, accelerating changes to the ecosystem, and the growing number of emerging and re-emerging infectious diseases. This chapter discusses many aspects and issues of global One Health, including the human–animal bond, shared health issues, animals as sentinels, the exotic pet trade and animal-assisted interventions.
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One Health, One Planet: why sustainability is a necessity
BSAVA Congress Proceedings 2021Authors: Libby Kemkaran-Thompson and Ellie WestLeadership perspective: what is needed right now and how to change minds? This non-hysterical look at the big picture provides information regarding the crisis we are facing, and details the leadership skills for you to personally take it forward into practice and your lives to feel like you’re making a difference. The time is past where we can all sit back hoping against hope that someone else will lead us out of this situation. There are things that every individual can do, but more power to effect change comes with better strategy – this lecture focuses on the practical delivery of change into existing structures.
What is happening in the veterinary sector: a high level perspective: Medical journal The Lancet has called climate change “the biggest global health threat of the 21st century”, but also the greatest public health opportunity. The veterinary sector has a moral obligation to mitigate against and adapt to the triple threats of global heating, resource scarcity and biodiversity loss. The transformative change required for this endeavour has been forced by the global pandemic; the question is how we choose to emerge from one crisis, in order to deal with the next? Small animal veterinary practice has a unique set of environmental impacts, not least the greenhouse gas effects caused by release of volatile anaesthetic agents, but also single use plastic consumption, hazardous waste production, and resource use. Some opportunities are clear; others present a wicked problem with interdependent impacts, inadvertent consequences of changes, and embedded behaviours all contributing to the tangled puzzle. We will need to show the best of what we can do; work collaboratively, think laterally, dissect the detail whilst seeing the bigger picture, and showing leadership in the workplace and in our communities. This lecture will highlight the excellent environmental sustainability work that is underway in the small animal sector, and the opportunities for growth and participation.
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One Health: antimicrobial resistance
The importance of antibiotic stewardship Author Fergus Allerton
For World Antibiotic Awareness Week this month (18–24 November) Fergus Allerton a European and RCVS Veterinary Specialist in Small Animal Internal Medicine provides an update of antibiotic stewardship guidelines.
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One Health welfare and the Links Group
Domestic violence and animal welfare Violent attacks on family members increased sharply in the first weeks of lockdown as tempers flared under the pressure of being forced to stay at home, according to police reports. But how often were family pets subjected to similar abuse? And would veterinary staff be able to recognize any nonaccidental injuries and know what to do to prevent further damage to animals or humans? John Bonner reports…
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One Health
Investigating a veterinary solution to COVID-19 Author Joe Brownlie
British science is facing arguably its biggest ever peacetime challenge – to develop reliable diagnostic tests and an effective vaccination for the human coronavirus SARS-CoV-2, the causative organism of COVID-19. If there is one researcher who truly understands how difficult the task will be, and what is needed to succeed, he is Joe Brownlie. The former head of pathology at the Royal Veterinary College led the team which solved the mystery of a coronavirus strain causing respiratory disease in dogs. He told John Bonner what lessons that project can teach us in dealing with the current pandemic.
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One Health
Chernobyl 30 years on Author John BonnerLucas Hixson is a US scientist working to protect the health of both the human and canine population around the site of the Chernobyl nuclear disaster. He told John Bonner why the Ukrainian authorities support a One Health approach to dealing with the deadly legacy of Europe’s worst ever industrial accident.
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One health: collaboration is the name of the game
BSAVA Congress Proceedings 2018Author Helen Ballantyne
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One Health in action in Sri Lanka
Sri Lankan dog population and rabies management shows WSAVA One Health in action Author WSAVAFor 17 years the Sri Lankan government used mass slaughter to curtail outbreaks of rabies in Colombo. The policy failed and now a project run by the Blue Paw trust is showing how veterinary expertise can solve the problem.
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One Medicine - a global effort
More on the case for bringing human and animal healthcare together Author Michael DayIt is estimated that 75% of the new diseases that emerged in humans over the last century originated in animals. So why have we taken so little interest? John Bonner talks to Professor Michael Day about the One Medicine project.
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