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      Bridging Borders for Health: The Vital Role of Regional Cooperation in Infectious Disease Control and Mitigation of Health Emergencies; A Response to the Recent Commentaries

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          Abstract

          Background The COVID-19 pandemic underlined the importance of effective regional collaboration to control infectious diseases. In December 2021, we published a scoping review in this journal examining research on how to operationalise regional bodies to effectively address potential infectious disease threats. 1 Key enablers included clear understanding of the regional context, sufficient budgeting, addressing cultural/language issues, staffing capacity, and governmental priorities. Initial engagement among institutional bodies involved in design, implementation, monitoring, or evaluation of such collaborations is essential, as are a transparent governance structure with clear responsibilities and secure long-term funding. Progress In 2022, Standley and Sorrell 2 and Teerawattananon et al 3 published two constructive commentaries on our work. Standley and Sorrell identified our lack of emphasis on ‘regional networks established by an external entity or donor’ (eg, US-CDC Disease Detection centres), noting dependency on external funding as a barrier to successful regional engagement. We agree, considering how these externally funded networks often function alongside national governance structures and priorities, and often — unintentionally or intentionally — exclude them. Thus, the influences of external funding on regional governance and technical bodies are an important area for further research. Teerawattananon and colleagues 3 discussed issues around establishing an Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) regional disease control body and initiation of the ASEAN Center for Public Health Emergencies and Emerging Diseases (ACPHEED) to prepare for the next pandemic. They outlined recommendations for fostering regional cooperation that reflect our findings, including identifying innovative financing mechanisms, applying a One Health approach, and involving private sector stakeholders. Teerawattananon and colleagues 3 agreed with Standley and Sorrell 2 that external funders, including private-sector funders, may play a key role in any future initiative. Building on our review findings and to help inform ACPHEED operationalisation, we interviewed 23 senior-level experts in regional organisations or networks globally, on their experiences with operationalising such bodies. 4 Interviewee opinions tallied with review findings, and those of Standley and Sorrell 2 and Teerawattananon et al, 3 highlighting governance and diplomacy, financing, capacity-building, stakeholder engagement, and multilateral agreements as key to encouraging effective operationalisation. Interviewees further emphasised the importance of a One Health approach, 5 the need to clarify how effective regional collaborations are — including through routine monitoring and evaluation, and diverse financing options — including potential private-sector involvement. Where Next… ACPHEED establishment was agreed at the 15th ASEAN Health Ministers Meeting, in May 2022, with a November 2022 launch, and Japan committing US$ 50 million of financial support. 6,7 In April 2023, Japan reaffirmed its commitment of US$50 million to develop ACPHEED, citing this as a step toward addressing global public health risks and strengthening cooperation within ASEAN. 8 These steps are encouraging. Lessons from the COVID-19 pandemic on the importance of sharing data, working with both proximal and distal countries, and effective resource pooling, must be incorporated for networks like ACPHEED to be effective. A notable aspect of ACPHEED progress is the decision to devolve functionally into a tripartite structure with secretariat in Bangkok and detection, response, and risk management based in Vietnam, Indonesia, and Thailand. Further research on operationalising regional disease control cooperation and ongoing learning from ACPHEED’s development and governance will help ensure we are better prepared for the next pandemic. Acknowledgements We thank the original review team 1 and authors of the two commentaries 2,3 for their relevant contributions to this discussion. Ethical issues Not applicable. Competing interests Authors declare that they have no competing interests.

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          Operationalizing the One Health approach: the global governance challenges.

          While there has been wide-ranging commitment to the One Health approach, its operationalisation has so far proven challenging. One Health calls upon the human, animal and environmental health sectors to cross professional, disciplinary and institutional boundaries, and to work in a more integrated fashion. At the global level, this paper argues that this vision is hindered by dysfunctions characterising current forms of global health governance (GHG), namely institutional proliferation, fragmentation, competition for scarce resources, lack of an overarching authority, and donor-driven vertical programmes. This has contributed, in part, to shortcomings in how One Health has been articulated to date. An agreed operational definition of One Health among key global institutions, efforts to build One Health institutions from the ground up, comparative case studies of what works or does not work institutionally, and high-level global support for research, training and career opportunities would all help to enable One Health to help remedy, and not be subsumed by, existing dysfunctions in GHG.
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            Operationalising Regional Cooperation for Infectious Disease Control: A Scoping Review of Regional Disease Control Bodies and Networks

            Background: The rapid spread of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic demonstrates the value of regional cooperation in infectious disease prevention and control. We explored the literature on regional infectious disease control bodies, to identify lessons, barriers and enablers to inform operationalisation of a regional infectious disease control body or network in southeast Asia. Methods: We conducted a scoping review to examine existing literature on regional infectious disease control bodies and networks, and to identify lessons that can be learned that will be useful for operationalisation of a regional infectious disease control body such as the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) Center for Public Health Emergency and Emerging Diseases. Results: Of the 57 articles included, 53 (93%) were in English, with two (3%) in Spanish and one (2%) each in Dutch and French. Most were commentaries or review articles describing programme initiatives. Sixteen (28%) publications focused on organisations in the Asian continent, with 14 (25%) focused on Africa, and 14 (25%) primarily focused on the European region. Key lessons focused on organisational factors, diagnosis and detection, human resources, communication, accreditation, funding, and sustainability. Enablers and constraints were consistent across regions/ organisations. A clear understanding of the regional context, budgets, cultural or language issues, staffing capacity and governmental priorities, is pivotal. An initial workshop inclusive of the various bodies involved in the design, implementation, monitoring or evaluation of programmes is essential. Clear governance structure, with individual responsibilities clear from the beginning, will reduce friction. Secure, long-term funding is also a key aspect of the success of any programme. Conclusion: Operationalisation of regional infectious disease bodies and networks is complicated, but with extensive groundwork, and focus on organisational factors, diagnosis and detection, human resources, communication, accreditation, funding, and sustainability, it is achievable. Ways to promote success are to include as many stakeholders as possible from the beginning, to ensure that context-specific factors are considered, and to encourage employees through capacity building and mentoring, to ensure they feel valued and reduce staff turnover.
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              Science is only half of it’: Expert perspectives on operationalising infectious disease control cooperation in the ASEAN region

              Governmental awareness of the potential spread of infectious disease, exemplified by the current Covid-19 pandemic, ideally results in collective action, as countries coordinate a response that benefits all, contributing expertise, resources, knowledge and experience to achieve a common public good. However, operationalising regional cooperation is difficult, with barriers including lack of political will, regional heterogeneity, and existing geopolitical issues. We interviewed 23 people with regional expertise focusing on Asia, Africa, the Americas and Europe. All interviewees held senior positions in regional bodies or networks or had significant experience working with them. Operationalisation of a regional infectious disease body is complex but areas interviewees highlighted–organisational factors (e.g. integration and harmonisation; cross-border issues; funding, financing and sustainability; capacity-building; data sharing); governance and diplomacy (e.g. building collaborations and partnerships; communication; role of communities; diplomacy; leadership; ownership; sovereignty; political commitment); and stakeholders and multilateral agreements–will help promote successful operationalisation. The international infectious disease community has learned valuable lessons from the Covid-19 pandemic, not least the necessity of pooling human, financial and technological resources, constructing positive working relationships with neighbours, and sharing data. Without this kind of regional cooperation, infectious diseases will continue to threaten our future, and the next pandemic may have even more far-reaching effects.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Role: ConceptualizationRole: Writing – original draftRole: Writing – review & editing
                Role: Writing – review & editing
                Role: ConceptualizationRole: Writing – original draftRole: Writing – review & editing
                Journal
                Int J Health Policy Manag
                Int J Health Policy Manag
                Kerman University of Medical Sciences
                International Journal of Health Policy and Management
                Kerman University of Medical Sciences
                2322-5939
                2023
                06 August 2023
                : 12
                : 8200
                Affiliations
                1Department of Global Health & Development, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, London, UK
                2Saw Swee Hock School of Public Health, National University of Singapore and National University Health System, Singapore, Singapore
                Author notes
                [* ] Correspondence to: Natasha Howard, Email: natasha.howard@ 123456nus.edu.sg
                Author information
                https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6674-1862
                https://orcid.org/0000-0003-4174-7349
                Article
                10.34172/ijhpm.2023.8200
                10590243
                31e5e5da-a460-4ba3-b4de-9a145db76ef2
                © 2023 The Author(s); Published by Kerman University of Medical Sciences

                This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

                History
                : 07 July 2022
                : 17 July 2023
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                Correspondence

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