Jeffrey B. Doty, Ekaterine Khmaladze, Miriam Shiferaw, Otar Parkadze, Theresa Kanter, Marina Donduashvili, Leopold Mulumba, Joelle Kabamba, Meseret Bekele, Andrea A. McCollum, Linda Lucy Boulanger, Juliette Morgan, Kasahun Tafese, Abyot Bekele, Mary G. Reynolds, Emile Okitolonda Wemakoy, Giorgi Maghlakelidze, Jean Malekani, Abraham Haile, and Jean-Jacques Muyembe
Preventing zoonotic diseases requires coordinated actions by government authorities responsible for human and animal health. Constructing the frameworks needed to foster intersectoral collaboration can be approached in many ways. We highlight 3 examples of approaches to implement zoonotic disease prevention and control programs. The first, rabies control in Ethiopia, was implemented using an umbrella approach: a comprehensive program designed for accelerated impact. The second, a monkeypox program in Democratic Republic of the Congo, was implemented in a stepwise manner, whereby incremental improvements and activities were incorporated into the program. The third approach, a pathogen discovery program, applied in the country of Georgia, was designed to characterize and understand the ecology, epidemiology, and pathogenesis of a new zoonotic pathogen. No one approach is superior, but various factors should be taken into account during design, planning, and implementation.