Submitted:
27 October 2025
Posted:
29 October 2025
You are already at the latest version
Abstract

Keywords:
1. Introduction
2. Methodology
3. Addressing Food Systems Complexities and Ethical Food Consumption
4. Advancing Nutritional and Environmental Awareness
4.1. Key Methods of Knowledge Dissemination in Nutrition and Sustainability
4.2. Media and Digital Platforms: Social Media, Documentaries, and Awareness Campaigns
4.3. Public Policies and Food Labels: Helping People Make Greener Choices
4.4. Scientific Research and Public Engagement: Bridging the Gap Between Academia and the Public
5. Challenges in Spreading Nutritional and Environmental Knowledge
5.1. The Conflict Between Industry Narratives and Scientific Facts
5.2. Psychological Obstacles to Dietary Change
6. Economic and Political Influences on Food Systems
7. Raising Awareness About Animal Rights and Welfare
8. Encouraging Plant-Based Diets Through Education and Commercial Promotion
9. Supporting Agri-Food Reform by Informing Policymakers and Consumers
10. Promotion of Plant-Based Food Research, Commercialization, and Consumption
11. Fostering Social Inclusion and Positive Recognition of Vegan Identity
12. A Paradigm for a Sustainable and Healthy Future in Africa Through the One Health Approach
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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| Method | Key Strengths | Target Audience | Example Tools/Initiatives |
|---|---|---|---|
| Education Systems | Builds lifelong habits and awareness | Students, educators | School gardens, integrated sustainability curricula |
| Media & Digital Platforms | Fast, broad reach, and cultural influence | General public, youth | Social media campaigns, documentaries |
| Public Policy & Labeling | Structural change informs purchasing | Consumers, institutions | Eco-labels, national dietary guidelines |
| Scientific Engagement | Credibility, evidence-based advocacy | Researchers, policymakers | LCA models, citizen science, public lectures |
| Plant Source | Main Processing Methods | Functional Applications | Commercialization Level | Consumer Acceptance/Trends | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Soy | Soaking, milling, extrusion, fermentation | Meat/dairy analogs, protein isolate | Widely commercialized | High in Asia and Western countries | [97] |
| Pea | Protein extraction, emulsification, film formation | Protein drinks, meat analogs, emulsifiers | Rapid growth, global brands use it | Growing due to hypoallergenic nature | [98] |
| Algae (e.g., Spirulina, Chlorella) | Drying, homogenization, protein extraction | Functional foods, supplements, meat analogs | Niche but growing | Moderate; increasing interest as “superfoods” | [99] |
| Lentils/Legumes | Milling, fermentation, extrusion | Plant protein blends, textured proteins | Well-established | Stable consumption; eco-conscious markets | [100] |
| Chickpeas | Roasting, fermentation, drying | Hummus, dairy alternatives, baked goods | Expanding | Popular in Middle East and now globally | [101] |
| Oats | Milling, enzymatic hydrolysis | Oat milk, cereal bars, dairy alternatives | Very high | Very high, especially in oat milk | [102] |
| Rice protein | Alkaline extraction, filtration | Beverages, protein blends | Mid-stage commercialization | Growing in sports and allergen-free markets | [103] |
| Hemp | Cold pressing, decortication, protein extraction | Beverages, protein powders, bakery products | Niche, expanding post-legalization | Growing among health-conscious consumers | [104] |
| Fava Beans | Dehulling, air classification, dry fractionation | Snacks, meat alternatives | Rising | Good acceptance in EU | [105] |
| Quinoa/Amaranth | Milling, extrusion, puffing | Cereal mixes, meat/dairy alternatives | Early stage | Trendy in functional food segments | [106] |
| Jackfruit | Minimal | Whole-food meat alternative | Small-scale commercialization | Positive trend in vegan cuisines | [107] |
| Mushroom/Mycelium | Fermentation, mycelium cultivation | Meat substitutes, umami enhancers | Experimental to emerging | High for health and sustainability appeal | [108] |
| Duckweed (Lemna) | Wet biomass processing, centrifugation | Protein isolate, smoothies | R&D/Start-up stage | Low; education needed | [109] |
| OH-JPA (2022–2026) Action track |
Name of the African Country | Main focus/s | Research outcome/s | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Improving the One Health approach to build stronger health systems | Uganda | One Health approach to health security | Investing in the funding gaps reinforces Uganda’s health security | [121] |
| Ethiopia | Implementation of the OH approach | Understaffing, underfunding of institutions, limitation of interdisciplinary cooperation, collaboration, and coordination among animal and human health practitioners are obstacles | [117] | ||
| 2 | Minimizing the widespread threats posed by new and recurring animal-borne diseases | All Africa | Urbanization, armed conflict, and deforestation | Increased risks of zoonotic infections on the environment, animal health, and human health | [118] |
| Limitations in detection of new infectious disease outbreaks in the community, in rapid pathogen identification, and in proactive surveillance systems | Main gaps in public health readiness, detection, and response systems Main paradigm shift is required to develop an effective infrastructure and common frameworks |
[122] | |||
| 3 | Manage and eradicate endemic zoonotic, neglected tropical, and vector-borne diseases |
African Union member states | Controlling the continental strategy for zoonotic disease | Raising awareness, commitments, and creating policy influence | [119] |
| Sustainable and effective strategies for post-elimination control of neglected tropical diseases | Post-elimination control of NTDs remained as challenging | [123] | |||
| Sub-Saharan Africa | Urbanization, fast population growth, increased demand for animal food, and natural habitats invasions | Infectious disease outbreaks are caused by zoonotic pathogens | [124] | ||
| Interventions against neglected tropical diseases | Insecticide resistance, multiplicity of vector species, changes in vector behavior, and cost | [125] | |||
| Vector-borne helminthiases: onchocerciasis, lymphatic filariasis, loiasis, and mansonellosis | Onchocerciasis and lymphatic filariasis have established global elimination programs Loiasis and Mansonellosis have largely been neglected and do not have large-scale control programmes. |
[126] | |||
| Zambia | Zoonotic transmission of vector-borne pathogens in humans | The occurrence of many vector-borne zoonotic pathogens circulating in vectors and animals | [127] | ||
| 4 | Enhancing food safety risk analysis, management, and communication | Sub-Saharan Africa | Food fraud threatens food safety and security | High production costs, weak regulatory systems, cultural practices, and technological limitations | [128] |
| Waste management practices by street vendors and factors influencing their mismanagement | A lack of recognition and comprehensive laws and regulations to monitor waste management | [129] | |||
| Effects of emerging technologies (genetically modified organisms, nanotechnology, and vertical farming) on food safety | Requirements of an integrated set of policy approaches, farmers' food safety education, incorporate regulations, organizations, and multidisciplinary research | [120] | |||
| Meat value chains and prevalent risks | Limitations in policy actors and the incorporation of a participatory approach in the street-vending sector | [130] | |||
| Nigeria and Ghana | Harnessing food safety | Weak enforcement of food safety laws is contributing to complications in the food production chain | [131] | ||
| 5 | Combating the quiet crisis of antimicrobial resistance | Developing countries in Africa | Fundamental conflicts that complicate efforts to control the proliferation of antimicrobial resistance |
Antimicrobial resistance policies and actions require balancing the interests of all relevant stakeholders, considering the interests and well-being of future generations | [132] |
| Sub-Saharan Africa | Antimicrobial resistance's causes and challenges in implementing prevention measures | Weak antimicrobial resistance surveillance and absence of collaboration, irrational use of antibiotics, poor medicine regulatory systems, lack of infrastructural and institutional capacities, deficiency of human resources, and inefficient infection prevention and control (IPC) practices | [133] | ||
| 6 | Ensuring One Health and environmental integration | Sub-Saharan Africa | Integrated One Health on preventing and managing zoonotic and environmental health threats | Integrating One Health in national agendas and a unified continental framework is required | [134] |
| Push-pull technology to sustain vegetable production and maintain soil health and fertility, human and animal nutrition, and food safety | The cropping system could contribute to eradicating zoonotic diseases by incorporating companion plants that fend off disease vectors | [135] | |||
| Nigeria | One Health framework to mitigate cholera outbreak through integration of human, animal, and environmental health | The One Health framework enables understanding of cholera dynamics and promotes sustainable solutions to deter future outbreaks | [136] | ||
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