2009
DOI: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2008.12.047
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Animal–human connections, “one health,” and the syndemic approach to prevention

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Cited by 125 publications
(98 citation statements)
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References 22 publications
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“…Research and practice in relation to One Health is shifting towards concern with shared causes of disease burden across non-human and human populations (Rock et al, 2009;Zinsstag et al, 2011). This shift follows from recognising that there can be no public health without animal health and ecosystem health.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Research and practice in relation to One Health is shifting towards concern with shared causes of disease burden across non-human and human populations (Rock et al, 2009;Zinsstag et al, 2011). This shift follows from recognising that there can be no public health without animal health and ecosystem health.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This concern with "being alive well" encompasses the wildlife and the land itself; it is not only a matter of human concern or a purely human phenomenon (Adelson 2000). Furthermore, this concern with "being alive well" resonates with the evolving concept of "one health" in veterinary medicine and public health (Green 2012, Rock et al 2009, Zinsstag et al 2011, as well as with Donna Haraway's (2008) revival of the term "flourishing." Haraway (2008), in fact, emphasizes that human bodies and human lives comprise multi-species encounters.…”
Section: Bringing Objects and Collectivities Into Considerationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In regard to the above, it is increasingly clear that due to the properties of complex systems, the health of human populations is integrally linked to animal populations (Rock et al 2009, Zinsstag et al 2011. Consequently, diseases in plants and animals may serve as sentinels for threats to human health.…”
Section: Humanist Values In a More-than-human Worldmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…One Health is presently addressing the link of animal and human health that Rudolph Virchow proposed a century ago (Rock et al 2009). Each culture interacts with animals distinctively, and households decide on human-animal interactions in these cultural contexts.…”
Section: Short Topical Reviewsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While the term One Health is new, a long history of natural scienceshuman health research precedes it (see Schwabe 1984, Zinsstag et al 2012, most recently One Medicine (sensu Schwabe 1984), a movement to bridge research silos of human and animal health, as they share biological foundations. Views of health as an outcome of a human-animal, socio-ecological system strengthened following 2003 animal-borne SARS and avian influenza outbreaks (Rock et al 2009), and researchers swapped the One Medicine term for the less clinical One Health (Zinsstag et al 2012). One Health's goal of work "at the interface of humans, animals, and the environment" (Travis et al 2014:28) is "home base" for ethnobiology, which similarly investigates dynamic relationships of cultures, biota, and environments.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%