One Medicine: How understanding animals can save our lives

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One Medicine: How understanding animals can save our lives

One Medicine: How understanding animals can save our lives

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His first book, Critical,has been translated into four languages. He lives in Australia with his family, enjoys CrossFit, photography, cold beer and even colder ice cream. Figure 2.. Areas of natural convergence and overlap between human and veterinary medicine considered for… As a library, NLM provides access to scientific literature. Inclusion in an NLM database does not imply endorsement of, or agreement with, Institute on Science for Global Policy. Emerging and Persistent Infectious Diseases (EPID): Focus on the Societal and Economic Context. 2012. [Accessed December 15, 2012]. http: ​//scienceforglobalpolicy ​.org/conference ​/epid-societal-and-economic-context/.

One Medicine | Humanimal Trust | One Medicine for Humans and One Medicine | Humanimal Trust | One Medicine for Humans and

Humans and animals share a lot of their biology and, according to the World Health Organisation, over 60% of all known causes of infectious disease are shared between humans and animals. Zinsstag Jakob, Meisser Andrea, Schelling Esther, Tanner Marcel. From Two Medicines to One Medicine to One Health and Beyond. 2011. http://www ​.sacids.org ​/kms/resources/OneHealth ​_Johannesburg_Zinsstagetal_2011 ​%20(2).pdf. Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO). One Health: Food and Agriculture of the United Nations Strategic Action Plan" Rome: Food and Agriculture Organization. 2011. http://www ​.fao.org/docrep ​/014/a1868e/a1868e00.pdf. With support and information from Humanimal Trust, we believe everyone can contribute to One Medicine, through giving, advocating, learning or educating. Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council. Swindon: Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council; 2014. [Accessed December 15, 2015]. Strategic Plan: 2010–2015. http://www ​.bbsrc.ac.uk ​/news/planning/strategy/.Are you a bibliophile? Or you are the person who collects PDFs only to never open them again in their entire life? Well, I’m the latter. Chien Yu-Ju. How Did International Agencies Perceive the Avian Influenza Problem? The Adoption and Manufacture of the ‘One World, One Health’ Framework. Sociology of Health & Illness. 2013; 35(2):213–226. [ PubMed : 23095003] Funny, fascinating and beautifully written. More than that it is moving and awe inspiring… I can’t think of a more important topic for everyone on the planet to engage with right now'

One Medicine, How understanding animals can save our lives by One Medicine, How understanding animals can save our lives by

European Food Safety Authority and European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control. (2021) The European Union One health 2019 zoonoses report. EFSA J. 19, 6406 10.2093/j.efsa.2021.6406 His articles have featured in the Guardian, the Telegraph, the Daily Mail, the Sunday Mirror and Huffington Post. A regular writer for the internationally acclaimed British Medical Journal, his article 'A letter from the ICU'is one of their most popular ever opinion article, read by over 130,000 people in 2020.Star Susan Leigh, Griesemer James. Institutional Ecology, ‘Translations’ and Boundary Objects: Amateurs and Professionals in Berkeley’s Museum of Vertebrate Zoology, 1907–39. Social Studies of Science. 1989; 19(3):387–420. Most current laboratory animal testing is for the sole, often arguable benefit of humans and not the animal concerned or its species. Bensaude Vincent Bernadette. The Politics of Buzzwords at the Interface of Technoscience, Market and Society: The Case of ‘Public Engagement in Science.’ Public Understanding of Science. 2014; 23(3):238–253. [ PubMed : 24495899]

OneMedicine

Perhaps the most widely used working definition is the one put forward by the One Health Initiative, a U.S.-based advocacy group including veterinarians, physicians, and public and environmental health professionals: “The One Health concept is a worldwide strategy for expanding interdisciplinary collaborations and communications in all aspects of health care for humans, animals and the environment” ( Kahn et al. 2012). This definition is strikingly broad, promoting “interdisciplinary collaboration” without specifying who should be collaborating with whom and on what, or indeed how they should actually go about it. This is reflected in varying references to OH as a “concept,” as illustrated earlier, but also as an “approach,” a “movement,” and even a “paradigm.” In recent years, the language of OH has been adopted by a series of powerful actors in biomedicine and global health, including the U.S. government’s Centers for Disease Control and Prevention ( CDC 2013), international organizations including the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), World Health Organization (WHO), and World Organization for Animal Health (OIE) ( FAO et al. 2008, 2010), and the biomedical research funders Wellcome Trust (2010) and Gates Foundation (2013). So what happened to initiate this change and the more widespread uptake of OH? Adopting OH as a single term had advantages for both OM and OWOH advocates: it was less cumbersome, significantly broadened the scope of their shared agenda, and decentered disciplines. The idea of “health” reaches far beyond infectious disease or clinical research and encompasses a much broader range of issues, practices, and policies than “medicine” can. Many advocates have embraced the flexibility of this expanded version of OH, adopting the “umbrella” metaphor as a way of articulating the inclusive nature of the agenda ( One Health Sweden 2014). This shift was also driven by more pragmatic concerns: in 2008 the Wildlife Conservation Society registered the OWOH slogan as a trademark with the U.S. Patent Office, preventing its usage by other organizations. Since 2010, a biennial international conference series and journal have been founded and activities have been sponsored by research funding bodies, philanthropic foundations, and pharmaceutical companies. Moving out from its origins in the United States and Switzerland, OH meetings and associations have become increasingly international, appearing across Europe (e.g., Netherlands, Sweden), Southeast Asia (e.g., South Korea, Malaysia), Australia, and Africa (e.g., Ethiopia, Uganda). The ideas and terminology of OH have increasingly been used to facilitate interdepartmental cooperation in policy making and government ( CDC 2013; Department of Health 2013; Leung et al. 2012). In the United Kingdom at least, several universities have merged their veterinary, medical, and biological sciences schools, referencing OH as part of the reason for these moves and launching new training programs ( Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons [RCVS] 2014; University of Surrey 2012). Clarke Adele. Social Worlds/Arenas Theory as Organizational Theory. In: Maines David, editor. Social Organization and Social Process: Essays in Honour of Anselm Strauss. Hawthorne, NY: Aldine de Gruyter; 1991. pp. 119–158.Tomé I, Alves-Pimenta S, Sargo R, Pereira J, Colaço B, Brancal H, Costa L, Ginja M. Tomé I, et al. BMC Vet Res. 2023 Oct 24;19(1):222. doi: 10.1186/s12917-023-03777-z. BMC Vet Res. 2023. PMID: 37875898 Free PMC article. Review. Just reading the book after I attended a book presentation with the author at the Lane Bookshop (nomen est omen) at the end of the world, in Perth Western Australia. One end of the world anyway. There are several key inferences to be drawn from this data. First, while OH has been adopted by key policy and research institutions across multiple disciplines, its uptake by researchers beyond the veterinary sciences has been relatively limited. Second, the nonveterinary fields where it has been taken up are those with direct interests in key OH topics, particularly those related to infectious diseases. Finally, the differing fields allied to OM and OWOH reflect their orientations toward clinical medicine and global health/infectious diseases. It is clear that authors were starting to use OH as a standalone term from 2008, and following the FAO/WHO/OIE joint statement in 2010, OH overtook its predecessors and became adopted much more widely. Data for 2014 suggest an acceleration of this trend, with citations using the term OH nearly doubling to 173 per year, although usage of OM and OWOH persists at much lower levels.



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