Cover image for One Health : People, Animals, and the Environment.
One Health : People, Animals, and the Environment.
Title:
One Health : People, Animals, and the Environment.
Author:
Atlas, Ronald M.
ISBN:
9781555818432
Personal Author:
Edition:
1st ed.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (331 pages)
Contents:
Cover -- Half Title -- Title Page -- Copyright -- Contents -- Contributors -- Preface -- One Health: What Is It and Why Is It Important? -- Chapter 1: Combating the Triple Threat: The Need for a One Health Approach -- INTRODUCTION -- BACKGROUND -- HUMAN DOMAIN -- ANIMAL DOMAIN -- GLOBAL FOOD SYSTEMS -- ENVIRONMENTAL DOMAIN -- CONSEQUENCES OF THIS UNPRECEDENTED CONVERGENCE -- A CALL FOR A NEW MODEL TO CONFRONT THIS CHALLENGE -- CONCLUDING REMARKS -- Citation -- REFERENCES -- Chapter 2: The Value of the One Health Approach: Shifting from Emergency Response to Prevention of Zoonotic Disease Threats at Their Source -- EMERGENCY RESPONSE TO NEWLY IDENTIFIED HUMAN INFECTIONS -- UNDERSTANDING THE DETERMINANTS OF EMERGENCE AND THEIR’MITIGATION -- TURNING EVIDENCE INTO POLICY THROUGH A ONE HEALTH’APPROACH -- Citation -- REFERENCES -- Chapter 3: The Human-Animal Interface -- INTRODUCTION -- EVOLUTIONARY PATHOGEN HERITAGE OF THE HUMAN SPECIES -- DOMESTICATION AND AGRICULTURE -- FOOD PRODUCTION, POPULATION GROWTH, AND HUMAN URBANIZATION -- HUMAN WORLDWIDE MIGRATION, COLONIZATION, AND TRADE -- INDUSTRIALIZATION AND GLOBALIZATION -- CONCLUDING REMARKS -- Citation -- REFERENCES -- Chapter 4: Ecological Approaches to Studying Zoonoses -- INTRODUCTION -- ECOLOGICAL APPROACHES TO STUDYING ZOONOSES -- METHODS OF STUDYING WILDLIFE DISEASES: POTENTIAL APPLICATIONS FOR ZOONOSES -- CONCLUDING REMARKS -- Acknowledgments -- Citation -- REFERENCES -- Chapter 5: Emerging Infectious Diseases of Wildlife and Species Conservation -- INTRODUCTION -- EMERGING INFECTIOUS DISEASES OF WILDLIFE -- THE GEOGRAPHIC ORIGIN OF PATHOGENS -- THE ROLE OF BIODIVERSITY -- THE EFFECT OF LANDSCAPE STRUCTURE -- THE EFFECT OF ALIEN SPECIES -- THE COMBINED EFFECT-THE CASE OF LEPTOSPIRA -- CONCLUDING REMARKS -- Acknowledgments -- Citation -- REFERENCES.

Zoonotic and Environmental Drivers of Emerging Infectious Diseases -- Chapter 6: RNA Viruses: A Case Study of the Biology of Emerging Infectious Diseases -- INTRODUCTION -- DIVERSITY OF HUMAN RNA VIRUSES -- RNA VIRUSES OF HUMANS AND NONHUMANS -- THE PATHOGEN PYRAMID -- HUMAN-ADAPTED RNA VIRUSES -- MECHANISMS -- VIRULENCE -- EMERGENCE AND THE CHANGING CAST OF RNA VIRUSES -- A CONCEPTUAL MODEL -- SURVEILLANCE AND RISK ASSESSMENT -- CONCLUDING REMARKS -- Acknowledgments -- Citation -- REFERENCES -- Chapter 7: Factors Impacting the Control of Rabies -- INTRODUCTION -- RHABDOVIRUSES -- LYSSAVIRUS DIVERSITY -- THE EMERGENCE AND EVOLUTION OF RABV -- RABIES VIRUS: AN OPPORTUNIST PAR EXCELLENCE -- PATHOGENICITY AND IMMUNE EVASION OR AMBIVALENCE AND THE BLOOD-BRAIN BARRIER -- CONTROL OF DOG RABIES AND EMERGENCE OF WILDLIFE RABIES IN THE DEVELOPED WORLD -- EMERGENCE OF DOG RABIES IN THE DEVELOPING WORLD AND THE BURDEN OF HUMAN RABIES -- FACTORS IMPACTING THE CONTROL OF RABIES -- ASPIRATIONS FOR A RABIES-FREE WORLD AND EVOLUTION OF NEW PARTNERSHIPS -- THE FUTURE -- CONCLUDING REMARKS -- Citation -- REFERENCES -- Chapter 8: Emergence of Influenza Viruses and Crossing’the’Species Barrier -- INTRODUCTION -- GENOMIC FEATURES OF INFLUENZA A VIRUSES -- RESERVOIRS FOR INFLUENZA A VIRUSES -- INFLUENZA VIRUSES: CROSSING THE SPECIES BARRIER -- HIGHLY PATHOGENIC H5N1 INFLUENZA-AN UNPRECEDENTED EVENT -- CONTROL STRATEGIES -- RISK ASSESSMENT AND RISK MANAGEMENT FOR INFLUENZA A: MORE THAN MEETS THE EYE -- CONCLUDING REMARKS -- Acknowledgments -- Citation -- REFERENCES -- Chapter 9: One Health and Food-Borne Disease: Salmonella Transmission between Humans, Animals, and Plants -- INTRODUCTION -- IDENTIFICATION AND SURVEILLANCE -- EVOLUTION OF HOST RANGE OF VARIANTS -- NONMAMMALIAN VECTORS FOR SALMONELLA -- CONCLUDING REMARKS -- Acknowledgments.

Citation -- REFERENCES -- Chapter 10: Cholera: Environmental Reservoirs and Impact on Disease Transmission -- INTRODUCTION -- NONCHOLERAGENIC, PATHOGENIC V. CHOLERAE -- EPIDEMIOLOGY AND ECOLOGY OF CHOLERA -- Genome Evolution of Choleragenic V. cholerae -- INTERACTIONS OF V. CHOLERAE WITH ITS MULTIPLE’ENVIRONMENTAL HOSTS -- THE FOES OF V. CHOLERAE -- CONCLUDING REMARKS -- Acknowledgments -- Citation -- REFERENCES -- Chapter 11: White-Nose Syndrome: Human Activity in the Emergence of an Extirpating Mycosis -- INTRODUCTION -- WNS -- DETECTION -- EPIDEMIC WNS -- ROLE OF HUMANS IN TRANSMISSION -- IMPACT -- RESPONSE -- FUTURE -- CONCLUDING REMARKS -- Citation -- REFERENCES -- One Health and Antibiotic Resistance -- Chapter 12: Antibiotic Resistance in and from Nature -- INTRODUCTION -- EMERGING ANTIBIOTIC RESISTANCE: THE WRITING WAS ON THE WALL -- RESISTANCE GENES ARE EVERYWHERE -- MECHANISMS OF ANTIBIOTIC RESISTANCE -- HORIZONTAL GENE TRANSFER AND THE SPREAD OF RESISTANCE -- THE WHITE PLAGUE -- THE BIG MISTAKE -- ORIGINS OF CLINICALLY SIGNIFICANT RESISTANCE -- TOOLS -- WHAT NEXT? -- CONCLUDING REMARKS -- Acknowledgments -- Citation -- REFERENCES -- Disease Surveillance -- Chapter 13: Public Health Disease Surveillance Networks -- INTRODUCTION -- WHAT IS PUBLIC HEALTH SURVEILLANCE? -- INTERNATIONAL REPORTING SYSTEMS -- FIRST STEPS TOWARD GLOBAL NETWORKS -- CATALYZING ONE HEALTH: H5N1 AND THE TRIPARTITE -- SURVEILLANCE NETWORKS: FROM GLOBAL TO REGIONAL -- DETECTING EMERGING INFECTIOUS DISEASES -- SYNDROMIC SURVEILLANCE: ANOTHER PATH TO ONE HEALTH NETWORKS? -- CONCLUDING REMARKS -- Acknowledgments -- Citation -- REFERENCES -- Chapter 14: Web-Based Surveillance Systems for Human, Animal, and Plant Diseases -- INTRODUCTION -- OVERVIEW OF SURVEILLANCE SYSTEMS.

TYPES OF INFORMATION SOURCES FOR DATA COLLECTION -- WEB-BASED SURVEILLANCE SYSTEMS -- SEARCH TERM SURVEILLANCE -- TWITTER -- CONCLUSION -- Acknowledgments -- Citation -- REFERENCES -- Chapter 15: Genomic and Metagenomic Approaches for Predicting Pathogen Evolution -- OVERVIEW -- GLOBAL CLIMATE CHANGE -- DETECTION OF VIRULENCE FACTORS IN THE ENVIRONMENT -- MICROBIAL METAGENOMICS -- HOW ENVIRONMENTAL DISRUPTION SELECTS FOR NEW PATHOGENS -- ONE HEALTH -- Acknowledgments -- Citation -- REFERENCES -- Chapter 16: Surveillance of Wildlife Diseases: Lessons from the West Nile Virus Outbreak -- INTRODUCTION -- WILDLIFE DISEASE SURVEILLANCE AT THE STATE LEVEL -- THE SUMMER OF 1999 -- CREATIVE APPROACHES TO ACHIEVING STATE WILDLIFE DIAGNOSTIC CAPABILITIES -- WILDLIFE DISEASE SURVEILLANCE INITIATIVES -- SURVEILLANCE OF WILDLIFE OUTSIDE OF FEDERAL OR STATE AGENCIES -- NEW EFFORTS TO ENGAGE THE PUBLIC IN WILDLIFE DISEASE SURVEILLANCE -- ZOO SURVEILLANCE -- NEW APPROACHES TO WILDLIFE DISEASE SURVEILLANCE OUTSIDE THE UNITED STATES -- CONCLUDING REMARKS -- Citation -- REFERENCES -- Making One Health a Reality -- Chapter 17: Defining the Future of One Health -- INTRODUCTION -- THE ROLE OF INFECTIOUS DISEASE AS A COMPONENT OF ONE HEALTH -- EVOLUTION OF THE ONE HEALTH CONCEPT -- DEVELOPMENT OF ONE HEALTH IN ASIAN-PACIFIC COUNTRIES -- CONCLUDING REMARKS -- Acknowledgments -- Citation -- REFERENCES -- Chapter 18: Making One Health a Reality-Crossing’Bureaucratic Boundaries -- INTRODUCTION -- CASE STUDY 1: 2003 OUTBREAK OF HPAI H5N1 -- CASE STUDY 2: COORDINATED SURVEILLANCE TO DETECT AN EMERGING PANDEMIC THREAT -- CASE STUDY 3: Unified messaging during 2009 pandemic H1N1 response -- CASE STUDY 4: GOVERNMENTAL MANDATE ENCOURAGES INTERAGENCY COOPERATION-PULSENET AND FOODNET -- CASE STUDY 5: KENYA ZOONOTIC DISEASE UNIT -- DISCUSSION -- CONCLUSION -- Acknowledgments.

Citation -- REFERENCES -- Chapter 19: One Health: Lessons Learned from East Africa -- INTRODUCTION -- UNIVERSITIES IN SUPPORT OF ONE HEALTH -- ZOONOTIC DISEASE PREVENTION AND CONTROL: A ONE HEALTH GRAND CHALLENGE -- EAST AFRICAN INFECTIOUS DISEASE ONE HEALTH CASE STUDIES -- COMMUNITY-BASED ONE HEALTH CAPACITY -- THE WAY FORWARD -- CONCLUDING REMARKS -- Acknowledgments -- Citation -- REFERENCES -- Chapter 20: The Future of One Health -- Acknowledgments -- Citation -- REFERENCES -- Index.
Abstract:
Emerging infectious diseases are often due to environmental disruption, which exposes microbes to a different niche that selects for new virulence traits and facilitates transmission between animals and humans. Thus, health of humans also depends upon health of animals and the environment - a concept called One Health. This book presents core concepts, compelling evidence, successful applications, and remaining challenges of One Health approaches to thwarting the threat of emerging infectious disease.
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
Added Author:
Electronic Access:
Click to View
Holds: Copies: