2019
DOI: 10.20506/rst.38.1.2960
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Evaluating One Health: the role of team science in multisectoral collaboration

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Cited by 14 publications
(13 citation statements)
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“…Second, there was no consistent framework or language for reporting the successes or challenges of collaboration, and thus, important content may have been missed during the search and review [36]. The scoping review team tried to overcome this with two strategies, which included building an expanded list of search terms and conducting an iterative review process using two independent transdisciplinary reviewers.…”
Section: Scoping Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Second, there was no consistent framework or language for reporting the successes or challenges of collaboration, and thus, important content may have been missed during the search and review [36]. The scoping review team tried to overcome this with two strategies, which included building an expanded list of search terms and conducting an iterative review process using two independent transdisciplinary reviewers.…”
Section: Scoping Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Language used to describe One Health work continues to be a challenge when working across disciplines. Each discipline contributing, and specifically those authors reporting on these interactions, bring their own nomenclature and vernacular [36]. As also discussed in the limitations of this work, we encountered challenges in how authors reported on which entities were involved in the response to a health event.…”
Section: Collaborative Success Factors Categorized As Starting Conditmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…One example is the interdisciplinary team and its network, which were considered as major (and yet under-evaluated) drivers of surveillance effectiveness by the team of CIPARS. Teamwork has been recognized as an important component of effective organizations in different settings, including in health systems (39), and has been recognized as an important component of successful OH initiatives (40,41). However, the evaluation of this element has been mostly absent in the evaluation tools for surveillance systems, currently available.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The intent was to reflect the 'real-world' workplace, with teams composed of people with different experience levels and/or backgrounds, organized by a team leader, all working toward a common goal (Ernst & Yip 2009, Gratton et al, 2007. This approach required students to actively engage in the skills that formed the basis for project success -shared leadership, collaboration, setting clear expectations and goals, and multidisciplinarity (Bennet & Galdin, 2012, Errecaborde et al, 2019 -while also developing ESH skills directly related to project development -systems mapping, stakeholder assessment, and science communication, among others (Charron, 2012).…”
Section: Graduate Student Leadership Communication and Project Managementmentioning
confidence: 99%