Operationalizing One Health: Bridging Veterinary and Human Vaccinology
As zoonotic threats and emerging infectious diseases continue to rise globally, the traditional boundary between veterinary and human medicine is rapidly blurring. Recent strategic developments in veterinary vaccines—specifically targeting complex pathogens like Pasteurella and Mycoplasma agalactiae—highlight the critical necessity of a unified "One Health" approach. By actively improving animal health and reducing pathogen shedding in livestock, we inherently protect human populations and secure food supply chains.
This integrated biological ecosystem is absolutely vital for securing global biosecurity, combating the silent pandemic of antimicrobial resistance (AMR), and preventing future spillover events at their very source.
Key Highlights:
- Deep integration of human, animal, and environmental epidemiological data.
- Development of cross-species immunization platforms to halt pathogen transmission.
- Substantial reduction of antimicrobial resistance (AMR) through proactive vaccination.
- Strategic early intervention to mitigate future global pandemic threats.