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University of Alaska Fairbanks

Pathways to Exploring and Understanding One Health Connections

University of Alaska Fairbanks via edX

Overview

One Health is internationally recognized as a strategy to understand and address many of the wicked problems facing the world today. Organizations such as the World Health Organization, the United Nations, and the Arctic Council have endorsed this approach. While many experts agree that working across disciplines and cultures at the interface of human, animal and environmental health provides a simultaneously deep and broad knowledge base, achieving the collaboration required for this work to succeed is often very challenging. The effective operationalization of One Health requires skills and approaches that support equity of knowledge transfer giving equal weight to natural sciences, social sciences and traditional ways of knowing. While knowledge holders are often well- versed in understanding information and communicating it to others within their own discipline and knowledge base, they often struggle to understand data as it is presented from knowledge bases and disciplines outside their own. Competence in active listening skills, cultural awareness, and guidelines that promote equity in the value of all knowledge systems engaged are key to the successful implementation of a One Health approach. This course will build on the skills acquired in OH1x. In OH2x students will work through actual case studies where problems will be examined, defined, and addressed using a community-based participatory One Health approach. Students will gain experience in

  • Active listening

  • Cultural awareness

  • Knowledge Holder and stakeholder identification

  • Defining primary and secondary problems

  • Building and maintaining community relationships and trust

  • Assessing the success of implementation plans

This course will prepare students for OH3x where they will learn about and use skills and tool kits to help them understand and develop implementation plans for One Health issues they are experiencing in their communities and or in the communities where they work.

Syllabus

Week 1: Integrating One Health through a Constructionist Approach

  • Operationalizing One Health

  • Approaches to One Health

  • Reductionism vs Constructivism

  • Engaging Stakeholders

Week 2: Zoonosis

  • Zoonosis

  • Identifying zoonotic disease

  • A Case Study in rural Alaska: rabies, dogs, bite injuries, and physical and emotional well being in rural Alaska

  • Why is this a One Health issue?

  • Defining the problem

  • Identifying Knowledge Holders and stakeholders

  • What do you need to know to help?

  • What has worked and what has not?

  • Thoughts for the future

Week 3: Food

  • Food safety security and sovereignty

  • Why is this a One Health issue?

  • Defining the problem

  • Identifying Knowledge Holders and stakeholders

  • What do you need to know to help?

  • What has worked and what has not?

  • Thoughts for the future

Week 4: Holistic Health & Wellbeing

  • Understanding mental and behavioral health through a One Health lens

  • Cultural and Spiritual considerations

  • Working towards solutions by addressing root causes

  • Indigenous ways of knowing and healing in a modern world

  • Applying the One Health approach to management and prevention

Taught by

Arleigh Reynolds and Tuula Hollmen

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