Teams Like This

1a. Prioritize surveillance to focus on high-risk interfaces by synthesizing data on health impacts on wildlife, existing wildlife health surveillance systems, missing cases of wildlife health events and detection bias, and socio-ecological interfaces and high spillover risk practices;
1b. Address sustainability through analyses of data and creation of tools to estimate cost effectiveness and benefits of surveillance, drawing from existing wildlife or livestock surveillance systems;
2a. Communicate a co-developed theory of change that connects multilateral agreements (e.g., SDGs) and international frameworks to the practical implementation of wildlife surveillance systems;
2b. Formalize the consortium through the drafting of a collaboration agreement with endorsements from respective member institutions describing how we work together in the long term and identify capabilities, synergies, and gaps among stakeholders in the implementation of sustainable wildlife health surveillance globally.
Wildlife Conservation Society Health Program
Department of Ecosystem and Public Health at the Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, University of Calgary
International Livestock Research Institute, One Health Research, Education & Outreach Centre Africa
Canadian Wildlife Health Cooperative
Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations
World Organisation for Animal Health (OIE)
United States Geological Survey National Wildlife Health Center
Samson Cree Nation
Wildlife Health Australia (WHA)
United States Department of Agriculture National Wildlife Research Center
Karen C. Drayer Wildlife Health Center One Health Institute, University of California, Davis
World Health Organization (WHO)
Mahidol University, Monitoring and Surveillance Center for Zoonotic Diseases in Wildlife and Exotic Animals (MoZWE)
Department of Ecosystem and Public Health at the Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, University of Calgary