One Health

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About One Health

One Health recognizes that the health of humans, domestic and wild animals, plants and the wider environment (including ecosystems) are closely linked and inter-dependent.

This approach encourages collaboration among experts in human, animal, plant and environmental health. These experts are from federal, provincial and territorial governments, Indigenous organizations and communities, academia, non-governmental organizations, industry and international partners. They work together to create sustainable solutions to prevent and respond to health threats to humans, animals and the environment.

One Health is strengthened when partners from different sectors, backgrounds and disciplines communicate, collaborate, coordinate and capacity-build. These are called the four Cs of One Health. One Health is becoming more widely used to make decisions and take action to prevent and respond to diverse health threats.

By integrating surveillance, understanding risks and taking collaborative action across sectors, a One Health approach strengthens prevention, preparedness and response, and helps manage complex issues. It also supports efforts to address broader environmental challenges, including climate change and biodiversity loss.

Common One Health issues

Examples of One Health issues that affect humans, animals, plants and the environment, and which require joint action across sectors include:

Changes in how people, animals and the environment interact have increased health risks in the world. Key factors that can contribute to the spread of diseases affecting people, animals and plants include:

How Canada is advancing One Health

The Federal Health Portfolio is applying a One Health approach to issues and events that could pose a health threat by:

Related links

International partners

Guidance and risk assessments

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2026-03-30