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One Health action and assessment

Guest edited by Jürg Utzinger, Bernadette Abela-Ridder, Baptiste Dungu, Jun-Xia Song, Ying-Juan Qian, Xiao-Nong Zhou

One health action © Xu Wang

The concept of One Health (OH), which emphasized the interactions between animal, human and their environments, has been proposed by several international and non-government organizations since 2004. While the world enters the third year of the COVID-19 pandemic by which an estimated cost of $8 to 16 trillion, an increasing awareness of the importance of OH has been recognized as a long-term, viable and sustainable approach. For example, OH approach is now firmly anchored on the global agenda, from the G7 and G20 to the UN Food Systems Summit, to combat emerging issues of COVID-19 pandemic. Compared the original OH concept in 2004, the OH approach has been expanded broadly in two directions, one is that the scope of concept has been extended to much wider, with its focus on the interaction of human-animal-plant-environment at global, regional and local levels; the other is that OH approach has been emphasized on transferring from theory into policy, and from policy into action further, supported by multi-sectoral, intradisciplinary and cross-regional cooperation. Therefore, multiple international organizations, including World Health Organization (WHO), World Organization for Animal Health (OIE) and Food and Agricultural Organization of the United Nations (FAO), United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), World Bank, etc. have made effort to promote the OH action plan recently, in order to accelerate coordinated strategy on human, animal and ecosystem health that help shape national OH systems transformation pathways.

In order to keep the step with the global developing trends of OH, the journal of Infectious Diseases of Poverty is launching a new Thematic Series entitled One Health actions and assessment. This thematic series will focus on OH action plan and development of OH assessment tools to promote more researches and actions implemented in the various settings for achieving the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) by 2030. In addition, the thematic series will publish articles, but not limited, on integrated approach, methodology, approach, movement, strategy, or paradigm, critical views and enquiries of OH practices, along with the development of assessment tools, public engagement, policy-making, politics and legislation in the field of OH. Various article types are welcomed, including Scoping Review, Research Article, Case Report, Case Study, Commentary, Letter to the Editor, Opinion, Short Report, and Study Protocol. Manuscripts submitted to this Thematic Series will be given a priority through speeded peer-review process.

Submission instructions

Before submitting your manuscript, please ensure you have carefully read the submission guidelines for Infectious Diseases of Poverty.

The complete manuscript should be submitted through the  journal submission system.

To ensure that you submit to the correct thematic series, please select the appropriate section in the drop-down menu upon submission.

Annual Journal Metrics

  • 2022 Citation Impact
    8.1 - 2-year Impact Factor
    5.7 - 5-year Impact Factor
    1.984 - SNIP (Source Normalized Impact per Paper)
    1.692 - SJR (SCImago Journal Rank)

    2023 Speed
    7 days submission to first editorial decision for all manuscripts (Median)
    118 days submission to accept (Median)

    2023 Usage
    1,109,021 downloads
    1,127 Altmetric mentions