Key Points

India is pushing for locally rooted communication strategies to enhance pandemic readiness under its One Health framework. The Centre, alongside FAO, emphasized simple, community-driven messaging to bridge gaps in disease surveillance. Experts highlighted communication as key to translating policies into actionable health measures. The initiative aims to strengthen coordination between animal, human, and environmental health sectors.

Key Points: India Stresses Local Communication for Pandemic Preparedness Through One Health

  • One Health workshop focuses on local messaging for disease surveillance
  • India aims to strengthen animal-human-environment health coordination
  • Pandemic Fund project prioritizes inclusive public engagement
  • FAO backs strategic communication for risk mitigation
2 min read

People-centric, local communication key for disease surveillance, pandemic preparedness: Centre

Centre and FAO highlight people-centric messaging to strengthen disease surveillance and pandemic readiness under India's One Health strategy.

"Communication is the critical bridge between knowledge and behaviour, between policy and practice. – Dr. Konda Chavva, FAO"

New Delhi, June 21

It is important to develop people-centric and locally rooted communication to boost disease surveillance and pandemic preparedness in the country, said the Ministry of Fisheries, Animal Husbandry and Dairying.

In a bid to boost the pandemic preparedness in the country, the Department of Animal Husbandry and Dairying (DAHD), under the Animal Husbandry Ministry in collaboration with the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) of the UN, organised a One Health Communication Strategy Workshop in New Delhi.

The workshop stressed the need for building a coordinated and impactful communication framework to support India’s efforts in strengthening animal health systems and pandemic preparedness through the One Health approach.

"India remains committed to advancing the One Health agenda by strengthening disease surveillance, enhancing frontline capacities, and promoting inclusive public engagement through strategic and coordinated communication," the Ministry said.

Animal Husbandry Commissioner (AHC) Dr. Abhijit Mitra, emphasised the importance of a clear and cohesive communication strategy in achieving the goals of the Pandemic Fund project.

“We must use simple, locally understood language to ensure that messages truly reach and resonate with communities," Mitra said.

"Delivering the right message to the right audience at the right time is key to creating meaningful impact," he added.

Mitra highlighted that effective communication is not just an outreach tool, but a critical enabler of behaviour change, inter-sectoral coordination, and risk mitigation.

Communication is a core pillar of the One Health approach, said Dr. Konda Chavva, Assistant FAO Representative in India.

“Communication is the critical bridge between knowledge and behaviour, between policy and practice. It is what ensures that the work we do translates into action and impact on the ground,” he noted.

The workshop also emphasised the importance of the One Health Strategy Document, currently under development.

This national framework will guide collaborative action across animal, human, and environmental health sectors, aiming to institutionalise a sustainable and resilient health security ecosystem in India.

Participants engaged in technical sessions and group exercises on message design, risk communication, and cross-sector coordination.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rajesh K.
Finally some sensible approach! During COVID we saw how urban-centric our systems were. Rural India needs simple messages in local languages, not English PowerPoint slides. Hope they involve ASHA workers and panchayats properly this time 🙏
P
Priya M.
Good initiative but implementation is key. Remember how vaccine hesitancy was a big issue? We need cultural sensitivity training for communicators - what works in Kerala may not work in UP. Also, more focus on tribal areas please!
A
Arjun S.
Why only now? After losing so many lives in second wave? This should have been priority since 2020 itself. Better late than never I guess... but hope they allocate proper budget and not just do workshops for show.
S
Sunita R.
As someone from veterinary field, I'm happy animal health is getting attention! Zoonotic diseases are real threat. But please involve local dairy cooperatives and poultry farmers in messaging - they're first line of defense 🐄🐓
V
Vikram J.
Good step but worried about bureaucracy slowing things down. During emergencies, we need faster decision-making. Maybe create special rapid response teams at district level with power to act quickly?
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Neha T.
Hope they use technology wisely - WhatsApp forwards ruined COVID response. Need verified info channels in every village. Also train youth volunteers to counter misinformation. Our experience should make us world leaders in pandemic comms! 🇮🇳

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