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61,005 resultsShowing papers similar to Helping to heal nature and ourselves through human-rights-based and gender-responsive One Health
ClearThe One Health Concept: 10 Years Old and a Long Road Ahead
This paper reviews the progress and challenges of the One Health concept, which recognizes that human, animal, and environmental health are deeply interconnected. Researchers discuss how emerging infectious diseases, antimicrobial resistance, and environmental pollution including chemical contaminants all require a cross-disciplinary approach. The study emphasizes that addressing modern health threats requires integrating ecological and environmental sciences alongside traditional medicine and veterinary practices.
One Health
This editorial introduces a journal issue focused on the One Health framework, which recognizes the interconnection between human, animal, and ecosystem health, and highlights how environmental pollutants including microplastics are increasingly central to One Health concerns.
Die Bedeutung der Konzepte One Health und Planetary Health für die Umweltmedizin im 21. Jahrhundert
This review examined how One Health and Planetary Health frameworks are essential for 21st-century environmental medicine, emphasizing the interconnected threats from chemical pollutants, microplastics, and climate change to both human and ecosystem health.
Aquatic one health framework: Integrating ocean ecosystems and human well-being
This paper introduces an Aquatic One Health framework that integrates ocean ecosystem health with human and animal wellbeing, discussing how marine pollutants including microplastics form interconnected threats that require coordinated environmental and public health responses.
One Health
This book provides a multidisciplinary introduction to the One Health framework, exploring the interconnections between human, animal, and environmental health and how integrated approaches to surveillance, policy, and research can address shared health challenges.
A One Health perspective on water contaminants
This review applied the One Health framework to water contaminants including microplastics, pathogens, and agrochemicals, emphasizing the interconnected impacts of water pollution on human, animal, and environmental health.
A One Health Approach to Marine Health
This paper applies the One Health framework — which integrates human, animal, and environmental health — to the challenge of protecting marine ecosystems from climate change, plastic pollution, and overfishing. The authors argue that addressing ocean health requires interdisciplinary collaboration between public health, environmental science, and policy sectors.
Environmental health: The most neglected part of one health
This commentary argues that environmental health — the health of ecosystems, water, air, and soil — is the most neglected component of the 'One Health' framework linking human, animal, and environmental health. Pollution, including from plastics and chemicals, degrades environmental health in ways that ultimately harm human and animal health. The author calls for greater integration of environmental health into global health policy.
Environmental pollution and One Health: An integrated threat to global health
This review examines environmental pollution through the One Health framework, which recognizes the interconnectedness of human, animal, and environmental health. Researchers found that pollutants including heavy metals, microplastics, and chemical contaminants circulate continuously between ecosystems, animals, and human populations, creating cascading health effects. The study calls for integrated, cross-disciplinary approaches to address pollution as a shared threat across all domains of health.
Tackling the microplastics pandemic: the CLEAN framework as an integrated one health approach for global environmental and public health
This paper introduces the CLEAN framework as an integrated One Health approach for addressing microplastic pollution across environmental, animal, and human health domains. Researchers argue that current responses to microplastic contamination are fragmented and propose a systematic risk assessment and prevention strategy analogous to occupational health management. The framework aims to bridge gaps between environmental science, public health policy, and community-level action on microplastic exposure.
One Health in Coastal and Marine Contexts: A Critical Bibliometric Analysis across Environmental, Animal, and Human Health Dimensions
This bibliometric analysis examined how the One Health framework has been applied to coastal and marine ecosystems, mapping intersections between human, animal, and environmental health research. It identified microplastics, aquaculture contaminants, and zoonotic pathogens as key topics and found that integrated coastal health research remains fragmented.
Editorial: Aquatic one health — the intersection of marine wildlife health, public health, and our oceans
This editorial introduces a research collection on aquatic one health, examining the intersection of marine wildlife health, public health, and ocean ecosystem integrity, and calling for integrated approaches that connect human, animal, and environmental health across ocean-linked systems.
Time to integrate “One Health Approach” into nanoplastic research
This commentary argues that nanoplastic research needs to adopt a "One Health" framework that considers the health of humans, animals, and ecosystems as deeply interconnected rather than studying each in isolation. Applying this approach could lead to more comprehensive and actionable findings about how nanoplastics affect living systems across scales.
A planetary health perspective on menstruation: menstrual equity and climate action
This planetary health review highlights how conventional menstrual hygiene products generate significant plastic waste and contain potentially harmful chemicals, while many people worldwide lack adequate access to menstrual products. Reusable and sustainable alternatives could simultaneously address menstrual equity and reduce environmental plastic pollution.
Environmental pollution and One Health: An integrated threat to global health
This review examines environmental pollution through the One Health lens, exploring how chemical contaminants, biological agents, and physical pollutants move between ecosystems, animals, and human populations. Researchers highlight that pollutants such as heavy metals, microplastics, and persistent organic compounds accumulate through food chains and disrupt biological systems across species. The study emphasizes that addressing pollution effectively requires coordinated approaches spanning human medicine, veterinary science, and environmental management.
A review on effects of microplastics on animal, environment and human health considering One Health perspective
This review examines the effects of microplastics on animal, environmental, and human health from a One Health perspective, highlighting how microplastic contamination interconnects ecological, animal, and human health systems.
L’approche One Health : l’Asie du Sud-Est comme lieu privilégié de sa mise en œuvre
This review examines the One Health approach — which integrates human, animal, and ecosystem health — arguing that Southeast Asia is an especially important region for its implementation given the area's high biodiversity and history of emerging infectious disease outbreaks.
Exploring educators’ perception of issues involving Planetary Health: A qualitative study in the Brazilian Amazon
Researchers investigated how teachers in a riverside Brazilian Amazon school perceive planetary health issues, finding that while educators recognized environmental connections to community wellbeing, formal planetary health education remains largely absent from basic school curricula.
The Concept of One Health for Allergic Diseases and Asthma
This review examined how climate change, biodiversity loss, and environmental pollutants including microplastics contribute to rising allergic disease prevalence worldwide, advocating for a One Health approach that integrates human, animal, and ecosystem health strategies.
Aquatic ecosystem indices, linking ecosystem health to human health risks
Researchers reviewed indicators used to assess aquatic ecosystem health and found that most existing tools don't adequately capture the risks that degraded water ecosystems pose to human health and well-being. They propose a new set of combined indicators — covering chemical contaminants, pathogens, and biological markers — to better link ecosystem health monitoring to human health outcomes.
Dioxins and the One Health Paradigm: An Interdisciplinary Challenge in Environmental Toxicology
This review applies a One Health framework to examine the sources, environmental fate, and toxic effects of dioxins across human, animal, and ecosystem health. The study highlights that dioxins, as persistent environmental pollutants, accumulate through food webs and exert harmful effects even at low concentrations, and calls for integrated monitoring and policy approaches to address persistent gaps in surveillance and regulation.
Planetary Boundaries Nurturing the Grand Narrative of the Right to a Healthy Environment?
This paper argues that the planetary boundaries framework, which defines safe operating limits for Earth systems, can strengthen the legal case for the human right to a healthy environment recognized by the United Nations in 2022. Researchers discuss how breaching planetary boundaries, including those related to novel pollutants like microplastics, directly undermines fundamental rights to clean water, food, and health. The study calls on governments to use this science-based framework to guide stronger environmental and human rights protections.
Does Pollution Only Affect Human Health? A Scenario for Argumentation in the Framework of One Health Education
Researchers developed an educational scenario linking pesticide use in agriculture to reproductive health effects across species, framed within the One Health approach. The study analyzed how 10th-grade students used evidence-based argumentation to evaluate pollution impacts on both human and ecosystem health, finding that integrating complexity-based approaches helps students better understand interconnected environmental health challenges.
One Health in allergology: A concept that connects humans, animals, plants, and the environment
This review applies the One Health framework to allergology, arguing that the increasing prevalence of allergic diseases reflects interconnections between human, animal, and environmental health, with environmental contaminants including microplastics among the discussed contributing factors.