Wildlife health programs are essential for monitoring and managing wildlife populations, which in turn supports biodiversity, ecosystem stability, the economy and public health. By conducting a comprehensive and systematic needs assessment, countries can ensure that their wildlife health initiatives and programs are fit for purpose and sustainable. This needs assessment tool aims to identify programmatic gaps and set priorities in developing or scaling up local and national wildlife health programs. The needs assessment was organized in four phases: planning, data gathering (through semi-structured interviews), data analysis and recommendations. The tool itself covers fundamental programmatic components, such as detection and identification of diseases, pathogens and toxic agents, information management, and analysis and communication. We assessed the performance of the first version of this tool, which was piloted in the Kingdom of Thailand and Republic of Rwanda, considering usability, adaptability, actionable insights, stakeholder feedback and continuous improvement. Based on the evidence gathered, we suggest an expansion of this tool to include the urgency and impact of gaps and needs as well as implementation capacity (from none to very high) to support the prioritization of criteria within each component of a wildlife health program. This needs assessment can help identify priority areas for wildlife health program improvement, thereby optimizing the impact of investments. • Comprehensive national wildlife health programs detect, assess, manage, and forecast wildlife diseases. • Needs assessment tool defines the current state and the future desired state and identifies gaps in functions and capabilities. • Needs assessments set priorities and inform surveillance and management for developing or scaling up wildlife health programs.
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Liz P. Noguera Z.
Jonathan M. Sleeman
Richard Muvunyi
One Health
University of Calgary
Mahidol University
World Health Organization - Pakistan
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Z. et al. (Sun,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69ca1280883daed6ee094f37 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.onehlt.2026.101394