Genomics, One Health, and the Future of Infectious Disease Preparedness

Résumé

In recent years, the landscape of infectious disease surveillance and diagnostics has undergone a profound transformation, driven by rapid advances in molecular biology, sequencing technologies, and bioinformatics. Emerging and re-emerging pathogens, increasing global mobility, climate-driven ecological changes, and intensified human-animal-environment interactions continue to challenge public health systems worldwide. In this context, the ability to detect, characterize, and monitor pathogens with high resolution and speed has become a cornerstone of effective preparedness and response.

Metagenomic and targeted genomic approaches now offer unprecedented opportunities to move beyond pathogen detection alone toward a deeper understanding of transmission dynamics, pathogen evolution, and population-level risk. These technologies enable unbiased discoveries of known and novel agents, support real-time outbreak investigations, and provide critical insights into genomic diversity that inform diagnostics, therapeutics, and public health decision-making. Importantly, they also bridge traditionally separated domains-human health, veterinary medicine, wildlife surveillance, and environmental monitoring embodying the principles of the One Health approach.

At the same time, translating these powerful tools into routine public health practice remains a complex task. Challenges related to sensitivity, standardization, cost-effectiveness, data interpretation, and integration into existing surveillance frameworks must be addressed thoughtfully and collaboratively. Capacity building, interdisciplinary cooperation, and the sharing of methodological experience across regions and institutions are therefore essential to ensure that genomic technologies deliver their full societal benefit.

This volume brings together expert perspectives that reflect both the promise and the practical realities of modern pathogen genomics. By highlighting methodological advances, applied case studies, and future directions, it contributes to a more informed and resilient public health infrastructure. I hope that the contributions presented here will stimulate dialogue, foster collaboration, and support the continued integration of genomic approaches into evidence-based public health action.

pdf (English)

|Vues: 370| |pdf (English) Téléchargements: 194|


pdf (English)

##plugins.generic.usageStats.downloads##

##plugins.generic.usageStats.noStats##

ANNOUNCEMENT

Starting from July 1, 2025, the article processing fee will be 20 EUR (or the equivalent in MDL at the official exchange rate of the National Bank of Moldova). The publication fee for an accepted article will be 150 EUR (or the equivalent in MDL).

Details here:

Processing Fee
A processing fee of 20 EUR (or the equivalent in MDL) will be charged for articles accepted for scientific review by the editorial committee of the One Health and Risk Management journal.
Note: This fee will only be charged if your article has been technically reviewed and accepted.

Publication Fee
Starting from 01.07.2025, a fee of 150 EUR (or the equivalent in MDL) will be charged for articles accepted for publication.
Additionally, authors will bear the cost of English language editing/translation services if the manuscript requires intervention. The fee is 5 EUR (or the equivalent in MDL) per page edited/translated.
The total cost for English editing/translation services will be communicated by the Editorial Board after the manuscript is accepted for publication.

Payment Details:
Payments should be made in MDL to the bank account opened in the name of the Biosafety and Biosecurity Association of the Republic of Moldova.
The invoice will be issued by the end of the month in which the payment was made.

Organization: Biosafety and Biosecurity Association of the Republic of Moldova
Address: 5C A. Cozmescu Street
Fiscal Code: 1017620004120
Bank Code (SWIFT): AGRNMD2X451
IBAN: MD34AG000000022513622370