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dc.contributor.authorAuthorCaceres-Escobar, Hernan.
dc.contributor.authorAuthorMaiorano, Luigi
dc.contributor.authorAuthorRondinini, Carlo
dc.contributor.authorAuthorCimatti, Marta
dc.contributor.authorAuthorMorand, Serge
dc.contributor.authorAuthorZambrana-Torrelio, Carlos.
dc.contributor.authorAuthorPeyre, Marisa
dc.contributor.authorAuthorRoche, Benjamin
dc.contributor.authorAuthorDi Marco, Moreno
dc.date.accessionedDate Accessioned2024-09-03T19:19:00Z
dc.date.availableDate Available2024-09-03T19:19:00Z
dc.date.issuedDate Issued2023
dc.identifier.citationReferencia BibliográficaEcoHealth, 20(2), 9 p.
dc.identifier.issnISSN1612-9202
dc.identifier.uriURIhttp://repositorio.udla.cl/xmlui/handle/udla/1390
dc.identifier.uriURIhttps://link.springer.com/journal/10393
dc.description.abstractAbstractHuman pressure on the environment is increasing the frequency, diversity, and spatial extent of disease outbreaks. Despite international recognition, the interconnection between the health of the environment, animals, and humans has been historically overlooked. Past and current initiatives have often neglected prevention under the One Health preparedness cycle, largely focusing on post-spillover stages. We argue that pandemic prevention initiatives have yet to produce actionable targets and indicators, connected to overarching goals, like it has been done for biodiversity loss and climate change. We show how the Driver-Pressure-State-Impact-Response framework, already employed by the Convention on Biological Diversity, can be repurposed to operationalize pandemic prevention. Global responses for pandemic prevention should strive for complementarity and synergies among initiatives, better articulating prevention under One Health. Without agreed-upon goals underpinning specific targets and interventions, current global efforts are unlikely to function at the speed and scale necessary to decrease the risk of disease outbreaks that might lead to pandemics. Threats to the environment are not always abatable, but decreasing the likelihood that environmental pressure leads to pandemics, and developing strategies to mitigate these impacts, are both attainable goals.
dc.format.extentdc.format.extent9 páginas
dc.format.extentdc.format.extent531.7Kb
dc.format.mimetypedc.format.mimetypePDF
dc.language.isoLanguage ISOeng
dc.publisherPublisherSpringer
dc.sourceSourcesEcoHealth
dc.subjectSubjectEmerging infectious diseases
dc.subjectSubjectGlobal health security agenda
dc.subjectSubjectOne health, Pandemic risk
dc.subject.lcshdc.subject.lcshBiodiversidad
dc.subject.lcshdc.subject.lcshSustainable development goals
dc.subject.lcshdc.subject.lcshBrotes de enfermedades
dc.titleTitleOperationalizing one health: environmental solutions for pandemic prevention
dc.typeDocument TypeArtículo
dc.udla.catalogadordc.udla.catalogadorCBM
dc.udla.indexdc.udla.indexWoS
dc.udla.indexdc.udla.indexScience Citation Index Expanded
dc.udla.indexdc.udla.indexScopus
dc.udla.indexdc.udla.indexNatural Science Collection
dc.udla.indexdc.udla.indexBiomedical Reference Collection: Corporate Edition
dc.udla.indexdc.udla.indexBIOSIS
dc.udla.indexdc.udla.indexCAB Abstracts
dc.udla.indexdc.udla.indexEMBASE
dc.udla.indexdc.udla.indexEnvironment Index
dc.udla.indexdc.udla.indexHealth Research Premium Collection
dc.udla.indexdc.udla.indexMEDLINE
dc.identifier.doidc.identifier.doi10.1007/s10393-023-01644-9
dc.facultaddc.facultadFacultad de Medicina Veterinaria y Agronomía


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