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Health News Updated Nov 21, 2025

Dr V K Paul Reveals How Community Action Can Prevent Pandemics

Dr V K Paul highlighted that community participation forms the bedrock of effective disease detection and surveillance. He emphasized that India's progress in One Health depends on a comprehensive whole-of-government approach. The media's role in combating misinformation and building public trust was also underscored as critical. Strengthening these partnerships ensures coordinated action during health emergencies.

Community participation foundation of early disease detection and surveillance: Dr V K Paul

New Delhi, Nov 21

Community participation is the foundation of early disease detection, surveillance, and can ensure pandemic preparedness, said Dr VK Paul, Member (Health), NITI Aayog, on Friday.

Speaking at the two-day National One Health Mission Assembly 2025 at Bharat Mandapam, Paul called the One Health mission a Jan andolan and called for “community participation”. He stated that with a whole-of-society approach and grassroots preparedness, the mission will be a success.

“India’s progress in One Health relies on a strong whole-of-government approach that advances a healthier and more resilient future. Community participation remains central to this effort. The media plays a crucial role in shaping public understanding and addressing misinformation, while our law-and-order systems serve as vital force multipliers during emergencies. Strengthening these partnerships will ensure timely, trusted, and coordinated action when it matters most,” said Paul.

“Community engagement is the foundation of early disease detection, surveillance, and rapid response, and highlighted that community-led mobilisation was one of India’s greatest strengths during the Covid-19 pandemic,” he added.

Paul stressed the need to extend One Health preparedness to the grassroots, where frontline workers, local governments, and communities form the first line of defence.

Dr Rajiv Bahl, Secretary, Department of Health Research and Director General, ICMR, urged the need to “build diagnostics, therapeutics, and vaccines for future outbreaks” with speed.

“We need science, technology, and development to work in unison. By bringing together experts from across sectors, the National One Health Mission platform is helping shape a more agile, prepared, and responsive ecosystem for managing current and future public health threats,” he said.

The deliberations concluded with a shared recognition that One Health is essential to achieving the national vision of Viksit Bharat. By advancing scientific excellence, enabling cross-sectoral cooperation, and strengthening preparedness across all levels of the system, India continues to move towards a safer and more resilient future.

— IANS

Reader Comments

Rohit P

Good initiative but implementation is key. In rural areas, we still lack basic health infrastructure. Hope this mission reaches the last person in the queue.

Michael C

As someone who worked with health NGOs during the pandemic, I can confirm that community health workers are the backbone of our system. This One Health approach is much needed! 👍

Shreya B

While I appreciate the vision, I hope this doesn't remain just another government program. We need proper training and resources for community health workers, not just speeches at conferences.

Arjun K

Jan Andolan is the right approach! When communities take ownership, results follow. Remember how local innovations helped during COVID? That's the spirit we need to preserve. 🇮🇳

Emma D

The focus on combating misinformation is crucial. During health emergencies, WhatsApp forwards often create more panic than the actual disease. Media responsibility is key!

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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