 One-Hel mempunyai medik-medik, perjalanan, dan kepercayaan untuk mempunyai orang yang berjaya, animal, plant, dan nature. The One-Hel approach requires change in outlook and action. It's move from focus on the diseases of people or animal to a more system-based approach, innovating and embracing joy action of working as well as technological solution and sharing learnings and evidence. One-Hel is not such about disease treatment or control. It is also to mitigate risk and outbreak before that happens. It brings also together a wider expertise and insights on help risk prevention, surveillance, and preparedness. One-Hel actually brings added value to save the life of people, animal, but also brings the economic benefit for people. For example, if you vaccinate in a cattle and sheep population against brucellosis in Mongolia, that would bring the economic benefit for the whole society in health sectors in economic of the household, but also in the private sectors working in these areas. In my recent trip to Wuhan, looking at the origin of the virus causing COVID-19, the One-Hel approach was reflected in the composition of the team. We had not only medical doctor and epidemiologist working in hospital, but we had also veterinarian biologist, ecologist working on the disease to understand the origin of the virus. We have seen over past years, transmission of diseases from animals to people is increasingly at an alarming rate. Just for example, 13 of the more than 200 zoonotic diseases transmitted from wild or domesticated animals to people each year caused about 2 billion human illnesses and 2.2 million human deaths, most in developing countries. Beyond this death, this disease can also destroy people's life and livelihood and they threaten the health of our animals and the environment around us. One example of this zoonotic disease is about the current pandemics of COVID-19, which has already until now more than 2 million people and caused more than 120 million cases around the world in a very short time. On this complex health issue, you cannot solve it by one discipline, by one agency. The key message is really to work together and different sectors in the government together to really solve this complex diseases jumping from animal to human, the so-called zoonotic diseases. Please follow and read our One Health Investment series. We have identified 22 practical actions that government investors and policy makers can take to tackle seven key health challenges. This have been packaged into a series, a brief that explains the importance on overall action areas. You can download them and read them from our Wildlife Stock Marta website. Over the next three months, experts will review the evidence and experiences in these seven areas to outline a set of One Health actions with the potential to enhance global health security.