In a landmark convergence of science, policy, and diplomacy, global leaders, researchers, and public health experts gathered in France this World Health Day for the inaugural "One Health Summit." This high-level assembly represents a pivotal shift in the international approach to health security, moving away from fragmented, reactive crisis management toward a proactive, integrated framework that treats human, animal, and environmental health as a single, inseparable system.
The summit, hosted by the French government in collaboration with the World Health Organization (WHO), served as a stage for the unveiling of a robust, four-pronged strategy designed to mitigate the risks of future pandemics and systemic health threats. With the theme "Together for health. Stand with science," the event underscored the reality that the next global health crisis will likely emerge from the "interface"—the intersection where human populations, encroaching wildlife habitats, and agricultural systems collide.
The Urgency of the "One Health" Paradigm
The impetus for this paradigm shift is rooted in alarming statistics. Scientific data confirms that approximately 60% of all known infectious diseases in humans are zoonotic—meaning they originate in animals—and an even more striking 75% of emerging infectious diseases share this origin. The COVID-19 pandemic, which resulted in an estimated 15 million deaths and triggered global economic contraction measured in the trillions of dollars, serves as the ultimate cautionary tale.
Beyond viral threats, the modern world faces a constellation of intersecting crises: accelerating climate change, biodiversity loss, water contamination, food insecurity, and vast disparities in healthcare access. These factors create the "perfect storm" for pathogen spillover. By recognizing that human health is inextricably linked to the well-being of the planet and its animal inhabitants, the One Health approach seeks to dismantle the traditional "silos" that have historically separated medical, veterinary, and environmental science.
Chronology of the Summit: From Ambition to Implementation
The proceedings in France were structured to emphasize the transition from abstract policy to tangible, field-level operations.
- Day 1: The Call to Action: The Summit opened with a call for renewed multilateral cooperation. Leaders emphasized that scientific literacy and evidence-based policy must replace the geopolitical fragmentation that hampered early responses to previous health emergencies.
- Day 2: The Four-Pillar Announcement: The core of the summit focused on the unveiling of the four major initiatives: the Global Network of One Health Institutions, the extension of the High-Level Expert Panel (OHHLEP), the 2030 Rabies Elimination Initiative, and the Strategic Framework for Avian Influenza.
- Day 3: Global Forum of Collaborating Centres: Concurrent with the summit, the WHO convened the first-ever Global Forum of WHO Collaborating Centres, bringing together more than 800 institutions from 80 countries. This forum served to operationalize the high-level policy commitments through technical collaboration and data-sharing agreements.
Supporting Data: Why the Current Model Needs Reform
The necessity for this change is not merely political but epidemiological. The current "siloed" approach to surveillance—where wildlife biologists, livestock veterinarians, and public health physicians often operate in isolation—has led to significant "blind spots" in disease detection.
Historical analysis of zoonotic outbreaks reveals that by the time a pathogen reaches the human population, the window for containment has often already narrowed. The One Health model proposes that by monitoring environmental indicators and animal health reservoirs, the global community can detect pathogens months, if not years, before they pose a significant threat to human civilization. Furthermore, the economic argument for this proactive approach is overwhelming; the cost of implementing integrated One Health surveillance systems is a mere fraction of the catastrophic fiscal losses incurred during a pandemic.
Official Responses: A Unified Front
The summit provided a platform for international leadership to signal a shift in political commitment.
Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, Director-General of the WHO, was categorical in his assessment. "The health of people, animals and the environment we share are inextricably interwoven, and we cannot protect one without protecting all three," he stated. Dr. Tedros emphasized that the WHO’s assumption of the Chairmanship of the Quadripartite collaboration (involving the FAO, WOAH, and UNEP) will focus on "delivering measurable impact at the country level."
French President Emmanuel Macron echoed this sentiment, framing the initiative as a moral and systemic imperative. "One Health is not just about protecting health; it is about recognizing that we live as one system," Macron noted. "France is determined to move One Health from ambition to implementation… Science must guide our action, and cooperation must be our strength."
The Four Pillars of the New Global Action Plan
The Summit culminated in the formalization of four specific strategic actions designed to operationalize the One Health philosophy:
1. A New Global Network of One Health Institutions
WHO is spearheading the creation of a global network designed to bridge the gap between high-level policy and grassroots execution. By mobilizing multidisciplinary expertise, this network aims to translate global guidelines into practical, country-specific tools. This will involve significant investment in the WHO Academy to train a new generation of "One Health" professionals capable of working across agricultural, environmental, and medical sectors.
2. Strengthening the Scientific Advisory Base (OHHLEP)
The One Health High-Level Expert Panel (OHHLEP) has been granted a mandate extension through 2027, with a further phase planned until 2029. This panel acts as the "scientific conscience" of the initiative, driving the global research agenda and providing the evidence-based advocacy required to hold governments accountable for their health security promises.
3. The 2030 Rabies Elimination Initiative
Rabies serves as the perfect "model disease" for the One Health approach. Because it is dog-mediated and almost entirely preventable through vaccination and community surveillance, its continued existence—killing nearly 60,000 people annually, many of whom are children—is a failure of integration. This initiative, led by the WHO, the World Organisation for Animal Health, and the Institut Pasteur, aims to eliminate dog-mediated human rabies by 2030, using the infrastructure built for this campaign to bolster broader zoonotic surveillance systems.
4. A Unified Strategy for Avian Influenza
In response to the growing threat of highly pathogenic avian influenza, a new Strategic Framework for Collaboration has been established. This framework moves countries away from fragmented, ad-hoc responses toward a unified, coordinated strategy that addresses the nexus of public health, food security, and biodiversity protection.
Global Implications and Future Outlook
The implications of the One Health Summit extend far beyond the immediate announcements. By elevating the One Health approach to the center of the global security agenda, the WHO and its partners are signaling that health is no longer just a Ministry of Health issue—it is a matter of national security, economic stability, and environmental sustainability.
The success of these initiatives will now depend on the willingness of individual nations to integrate these frameworks into their own domestic policies. The inclusion of ministers from countries as diverse as Germany, Indonesia, and South Africa at the Global Forum of Collaborating Centres indicates a broad, cross-regional appetite for this change.
As the world looks toward the future, the lessons of the past decade have become clear: the speed of modern globalization necessitates a speed of response that only integrated, cross-sectoral collaboration can provide. The One Health Summit in France has set the stage, but the true test will be in the coming years, as the international community works to turn these high-level commitments into concrete, life-saving actions on the ground. Through this, the world hopes to not only recover from the crises of the past but to build a more resilient, proactive, and interconnected shield against the health threats of the future.
