One Medicine One Science: a framework for exploring challenges at the intersection of animals, humans, and the environment

Characterizing the health consequences of interactions among animals, humans, and the environment in the face of climatic change, environmental disturbance, and expanding human populations is a critical global challenge in today's world. Exchange of interdisciplinary knowledge in basic and appl...

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Veröffentlicht in:Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences 2014-12, Vol.1334 (1), p.26-44
Hauptverfasser: Travis, Dominic A., Sriramarao, P., Cardona, Carol, Steer, Clifford J., Kennedy, Shaun, Sreevatsan, Srinand, Murtaugh, Michael P.
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container_end_page 44
container_issue 1
container_start_page 26
container_title Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences
container_volume 1334
creator Travis, Dominic A.
Sriramarao, P.
Cardona, Carol
Steer, Clifford J.
Kennedy, Shaun
Sreevatsan, Srinand
Murtaugh, Michael P.
description Characterizing the health consequences of interactions among animals, humans, and the environment in the face of climatic change, environmental disturbance, and expanding human populations is a critical global challenge in today's world. Exchange of interdisciplinary knowledge in basic and applied sciences and medicine that includes scientists, health professionals, key sponsors, and policy experts revealed that relevant case studies of monkeypox, influenza A, tuberculosis, and HIV can be used to guide strategies for anticipating and responding to new disease threats such as the Ebola and Chickungunya viruses, as well as to improve programs to control existing zoonotic diseases, including tuberculosis. The problem of safely feeding the world while preserving the environment and avoiding issues such as antibiotic resistance in animals and humans requires cooperative scientific problem solving. Food poisoning outbreaks resulting from Salmonella growing in vegetables have demonstrated the need for knowledge of pathogen evolution and adaptation in developing appropriate countermeasures for prevention and policy development. Similarly, pesticide use for efficient crop production must take into consideration bee population declines that threaten the availability of the two‐thirds of human foods that are dependent on pollination. This report presents and weighs the objective merits of competing health priorities and identifies gaps in knowledge that threaten health security, to promote discussion of major public policy implications such that they may be decided with at least an underlying platform of facts.
doi_str_mv 10.1111/nyas.12601
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subjects Agriculture - legislation & jurisprudence
Agriculture - trends
Animals
Antibiotic resistance
Climate change
Communicable Diseases, Emerging - prevention & control
Congresses as Topic
Crop production
Disease control
emerging infectious disease
Environment
Food contamination
Food Safety
food security
Foods
global health
Global Health - legislation & jurisprudence
Health
Human
Human populations
Humans
iCOMOS
Medicine
one health
One Medicine One Science
Original
Pesticides
Pollination
Population decline
Population Growth
Populations
Problem solving
Public Health - legislation & jurisprudence
Public Policy
Tuberculosis
title One Medicine One Science: a framework for exploring challenges at the intersection of animals, humans, and the environment
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