Pulse Brain · Growing Health Evidence Index
Tier 4 — Narrative / commentaryPeer-reviewed

Soil microbiomes in One Health policy

Singh, B.K. et al.

2023

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Summary

This commentary or perspective piece, published in Nature Microbiology, argues for the formal inclusion of soil microbiomes within One Health policy, drawing on evidence that soil microbial communities are central to antimicrobial resistance dynamics, disease ecology, and broader ecosystem services affecting human and animal health. The authors, led by Brajesh K. Singh, likely outline current policy gaps and propose actionable integration of soil microbiome monitoring into international and national health governance. The piece contributes a cross-disciplinary framing that bridges soil science, microbiology, and public health policy.

UK applicability

The findings are broadly applicable to UK policy, particularly given the UK's commitment to One Health approaches under its National Action Plan on Antimicrobial Resistance and the Environment Act 2021; UK agencies such as UKHSA and Defra would be relevant implementing bodies for any soil microbiome monitoring frameworks proposed.

Key measures

Soil microbiome diversity indicators; antimicrobial resistance (AMR) prevalence; ecosystem services metrics; policy framework alignment across human, animal and environmental health sectors

Outcomes reported

The paper examines the role of soil microbiomes in linking human, animal, and environmental health within One Health policy frameworks, likely reporting on evidence gaps, policy recommendations, and the mechanisms by which soil microbial diversity influences health outcomes across sectors.

Theme
Policy, governance & rights
Subject
Soil microbiology & One Health governance
Study type
Commentary
Study design
Narrative review
Source type
Peer-reviewed study
Status
Published
Geography
Global
System type
Soil ecosystem / cross-sectoral health systems
Catalogue ID
XL0645

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