TY - JOUR T1 - Operationalisation of consensual One Health roadmaps in countries for improved IHR capacities and health security JF - BMJ Global Health JO - BMJ Global Health DO - 10.1136/bmjgh-2021-005275 VL - 6 IS - 7 SP - e005275 AU - Stephane de la Rocque AU - Guillaume Belot AU - Kaylee Marie Myhre Errecaborde AU - Rajesh Sreedharan AU - Artem Skrypnyk AU - Tanja Schmidt AU - Nicolas Isla AU - Tieble Traore AU - Ambrose Talisuna AU - Gyanendra Gongal AU - Dalia Samhouri AU - François Caya AU - Maud Carron AU - Nirmal Kandel AU - Jun Xing AU - Stella Chungong Y1 - 2021/07/01 UR - http://gh.bmj.com/content/6/7/e005275.abstract N2 - The COVID-19 pandemic is a devastating reminder that mitigating the threat of emerging zoonotic outbreaks relies on our collective capacity to work across human health, animal health and environment sectors. Despite the critical need for shared approaches, collaborative benchmarks in the International Health Regulations (IHR) Monitoring and Evaluation Framework and more specifically the Joint External Evaluation (JEE) often reveal low levels of performance in collaborative technical areas (TAs), thus identifying a real need to work on the human–animal–environment interface to improve health security. The National Bridging Workshops (NBWs) proposed jointly by the World Organisation of Animal Health and World Health Organization (WHO) provide opportunity for national human health, animal health, environment and other relevant sectors in countries to explore the efficiency and gaps in their coordination for the management of zoonotic diseases. The results, gathered in a prioritised roadmap, support the operationalisation of the recommendations made during JEE for TAs where a multisectoral One Health approach is beneficial. For those collaborative TAs (12 out of 19 in the JEE), more than two-thirds of the recommendations can be implemented through one or multiple activities jointly agreed during NBW. Interestingly, when associated with the WHO Benchmark Tool for IHR, it appears that NBW activities are often associated with lower level of performance than anticipated during the JEE missions, revealing that countries often overestimate their capacities at the human–animal–environment interface. Deeper, more focused and more widely shared discussions between professionals highlight the need for concrete foundations of multisectoral coordination to meet goals for One Health and improved global health security through IHR.Data are available in a public, open access repository. ER -