Basic module 3

BM3 presents concrete examples of One Health applications, including transdisciplinary project management, integrated health prevention, surveillance and control, and cross-sectoral data management. Theories of change are used to illustrate and apply the impact of health changes on stakeholders. The session also explores the benefits and challenges of cross-sectoral data collection, management, sharing, presentation, and protection.

Day 1 (with td-net): tools for stakeholder analysis and engagement; theories of change for impact orientation
Day 2: integrated One Health surveillance, health risk preparedness and response
Day 3: intersectoral data management

Lecturers

Salome Dürr, Prof. Dr. med. vet., Dip. ECVPH, Veterinary Public Health Institute, University of Bern, BIO

Christian Althaus, PD Dr., Deputy Head Section Emerging Infectious Diseases and International Cooperation, Federal Office of Public Health  FOPH, BIO

Katharina Stärk, Prof. Dr. med. vet., Phd, MRCVS, DipECVPH, Federal Food Safety and Veterinary Office, BIO

Annora Mack, Federal Office of Public Health FOPH, BIO

Giulia Paternoster, DVM, PhD, Swissmedic – Swiss Agency for Therapeutic Products, BIO

Aitana Neves, Dr., SIB Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics, BIO

Carolina Agop Nersesian, PhD, Federal Office of Public Health FOPH, BIO

Nicola Dhima, Federal Office of Public Health FOPH, BIO

Christof Ort, Dr., Department Urban Water Management, EAWAG – Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology, BIO

Sabine Hoffmann, Dr., Department Environmental Social Sciences, EAWAG – Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology, BIO

Stefan Müller, Dr., Network for Transdisciplinary Research (td-net), Swiss Academies of Arts and Sciences, BIO