1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9911012679103321

Autore

Roger François

Titolo

One Health Atlas

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Paris, France, : Editions Quae, 2025

Edizione

[1st ed.]

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (210 p.)

Collana

Hors Collection

Altri autori (Persone)

OliveMarie-Marie

PeyreMarisa

Soggetti

SOCIAL SCIENCE / Disease & Health Issues

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Nota di contenuto

Intro -- Table of contents -- Foreword -- Preface -- Acknowledgements -- Introduction to One Health -- PART 1 Foundations and recent history -- Concepts through time:  a brief history from Hippocrates  to COVID-19 -- From Manhattan to Berlin: how the principles  of One Health have evolved -- Indigenous people  and (One) Health -- Epistemology of One Health: -- The historical context  of the human plague:  from miasmas to One Health -- From past pandemics to recent threats: the ongoing zoonotic risks of influenza -- Unveiling filovirus reservoirs -- One Health risk assessment:  lessons from SARS, MERS-CoV and COVID-19 -- COVID-19: institutionalizing One Health -- Publishing One Health:evolving global patterns -- Global trends in #OneHealth:  insights from online searches  and hashtags -- Engaging with professional media to raise public awareness of One Health -- Integrated Health: one goal, many approaches -- PART 2 Zoonoses, agriculture and food security -- Infection with  SARS-CoV-2 in animals:  a One Health challenge -- Mapping the areas at risk for transmission of a vector-borne disease (West Nile fever) -- One Health game theory:  eliminating dog rabies  in Africa -- The way forward for rabies control  and elimination in South Asia:  the One Health approach -- The One Health approach to manage -- Multi-scale spatial modelling  to facilitate the implementation of One Health approaches -- Tuberculosis unleashed:  why One Health holds the key -- Cross-species influenza threats: the critical role of One Health surveillance and control -- One Health approach and  



African trypanosomiasis  in Guinea -- Combating non-zoonotic animal plagues: the power of One Health -- How One Health can transform food systems -- Crop production practices and infectious hazards: a One Health call to action.

Agroecological crop protection: a special link between  agroecology and One Health -- Soil health must be included  in One Health -- One Health in aquaculture:  antibiotic use in an era  of global warming -- One Health and the spread -- One Health surveillance  of antimicrobial resistance -- One Health for food safety -- PART 3 Education, networks and governance: One Health -- Embracing complexity early on: incorporating One Health into bachelor's programmes -- Collaborative approach to building -- Visualization of One Health  education in South-East Asia -- One Health Research, Education and Outreach Centre in Africa (OHRECA) -- Innovative tools for One Health  surveillance: ALERT, a collaborative serious game -- One Health approach  in Guinea -- CGIAR Initiative on One Health -- Local service providers and -- Integrated (One) Health service  delivery in pastoralist settings  in sub-Saharan Africa -- Integrated crop-livestock  clinics in East Africa -- Capacitating One Health  in Eastern and Southern Africa (COHESA) -- ILRI One Health research for -- EcoHealth projects in South-East Asia -- One Health in Vietnam: mapping action -- Myanmar's One Health surveillance:challenges and next steps -- Strategizing a collaborative One Health future for the Caribbean -- National mapping of One Health stakeholders in France -- One Health and resilient landscapes: empowering communities through -- BCOMING: Safeguarding biodiversity  to prevent the next pandemic -- ZACAM: One Health  long-term socioecological  research platform -- PREZODE International Initiative  and its contribution to promoting  a One Health approach -- One Health: the ultimate  strategy to prevent future  pandemics -- PART 4 Future directions and emerging challenges -- One Health: a widely endorsed  but difficult-to-fund approach.

Investing in One Health: a frame­work to demonstrate its added value and return on investment -- Using thematic clustering for  data-driven insights on One Health research and knowledge gaps -- One Health governance:  implementation bottlenecks  in the Global South -- Networks shaping the future  of One Health: focusing on  the Afro-Eurasian landmass -- Using PADI-web to monitor  animal and plant diseases  in digital media sources -- The scope of public-private partnerships in One Health -- No One Health without a trueintegration of social sciences -- How economics connects food, healthand the environment -- Participatory approaches and One Health:the example of community-basedsurveillance systems -- Bridging gaps: gender equity as the neglected link in One Health implementation -- One Welfare: integrating animal welfare into One Health -- Dogs: key players  in the One Health approach -- Building a common language for antimicrobial stewardship in One Health -- One Health at scale:  social-ecological system health -- From bush to fork: managing wild meat value chains to safeguard health and biodiversity -- A systems approach to address  climate change, biodiversity loss and health in Canada -- The health toll of climate change: why One Health matters -- One Health Alert: A(H5N1)  a cross-species threat on the rise -- One Health in urban settings -- Artificial intelligence in One Health:  unlocking potential  and navigating risks -- Conclusion: One Health Risk governance and the science-policy-society interface -- Epilogue -- Afterword -- Glossary -- General references -- List of acronyms -- List of authors -- Photo credits.

Sommario/riassunto

The One Health approach offers a comprehensive framework to address



the interwoven health challenges arising from the interactions among humans, animals, plants and the environment.