One health - eco-health

Lecture given in English and translated in Mandarin. Lecture: One Health - Eco-Health given the at National Taiwan University, Risk Society and Policy Research Center, College of Social Science on June 8, 2016. There is only one world and only one health. Health effects ripple throughout the web of...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Rolston, Holmes, 1932-
Format: Moving Image (Video)
Language:English
Chinese
Published: Colorado State University. Libraries 2016
Subjects:
BSE
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10217/178135
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spelling ftcolostateunidc:oai:mountainscholar.org:10217/178135 2023-05-15T15:34:27+02:00 One health - eco-health Lecture: One health - eco-health Rolston, Holmes, 1932- 2016-11-01T20:16:31Z 1 hour 17 minutes 27 seconds born digital motion pictures (visual works) digital moving image formats text/html video/mp4 http://hdl.handle.net/10217/178135 English Chinese eng chi eng chi Colorado State University. Libraries Streaming Media - Rolston (Holmes) Collection http://hdl.handle.net/10217/178135 global health world health pandemics domestic animals wild animals Nipa virus SARS avian flu ebola BSE bovine spongiform encephalopathy HIV/AIDS Superfund Deepwater Horizon Zika virus West Nile virus Kepone MovingImage 2016 ftcolostateunidc 2022-06-16T17:20:49Z Lecture given in English and translated in Mandarin. Lecture: One Health - Eco-Health given the at National Taiwan University, Risk Society and Policy Research Center, College of Social Science on June 8, 2016. There is only one world and only one health. Health effects ripple throughout the web of life. Human health requires thinking in ecological contexts, increasingly in more global ones. This further suggests more inclusive ethical concerns: global, international, and interspecific, beyond the immediate protection of human individuals from disease. Developed countries, which may have thought themselves protected with their high technologies and advanced medical systems, discover they are still linked with health, human and animal, in the developing world, even in wild nature, and vulnerable to disruptions there, to which they may also be contributing. Thinking of health must consider our entwined destiny with our landscapes. Ecology is strikingly like medical science. Both are therapeutic sciences. Ecologists are responsible for environmental health, which is really another form of public health. Health is just as much "skin-out" as it is "skin-in." It is hard to live a healthy life in a sick environment. Moving Image (Video) Avian flu Digital Collections of Colorado (Colorado State University) Nipa ENVELOPE(14.813,14.813,68.567,68.567)
institution Open Polar
collection Digital Collections of Colorado (Colorado State University)
op_collection_id ftcolostateunidc
language English
Chinese
topic global health
world health
pandemics
domestic animals
wild animals
Nipa virus
SARS
avian flu
ebola
BSE
bovine spongiform encephalopathy
HIV/AIDS
Superfund
Deepwater Horizon
Zika virus
West Nile virus
Kepone
spellingShingle global health
world health
pandemics
domestic animals
wild animals
Nipa virus
SARS
avian flu
ebola
BSE
bovine spongiform encephalopathy
HIV/AIDS
Superfund
Deepwater Horizon
Zika virus
West Nile virus
Kepone
Rolston, Holmes, 1932-
One health - eco-health
topic_facet global health
world health
pandemics
domestic animals
wild animals
Nipa virus
SARS
avian flu
ebola
BSE
bovine spongiform encephalopathy
HIV/AIDS
Superfund
Deepwater Horizon
Zika virus
West Nile virus
Kepone
description Lecture given in English and translated in Mandarin. Lecture: One Health - Eco-Health given the at National Taiwan University, Risk Society and Policy Research Center, College of Social Science on June 8, 2016. There is only one world and only one health. Health effects ripple throughout the web of life. Human health requires thinking in ecological contexts, increasingly in more global ones. This further suggests more inclusive ethical concerns: global, international, and interspecific, beyond the immediate protection of human individuals from disease. Developed countries, which may have thought themselves protected with their high technologies and advanced medical systems, discover they are still linked with health, human and animal, in the developing world, even in wild nature, and vulnerable to disruptions there, to which they may also be contributing. Thinking of health must consider our entwined destiny with our landscapes. Ecology is strikingly like medical science. Both are therapeutic sciences. Ecologists are responsible for environmental health, which is really another form of public health. Health is just as much "skin-out" as it is "skin-in." It is hard to live a healthy life in a sick environment.
format Moving Image (Video)
author Rolston, Holmes, 1932-
author_facet Rolston, Holmes, 1932-
author_sort Rolston, Holmes, 1932-
title One health - eco-health
title_short One health - eco-health
title_full One health - eco-health
title_fullStr One health - eco-health
title_full_unstemmed One health - eco-health
title_sort one health - eco-health
publisher Colorado State University. Libraries
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/10217/178135
long_lat ENVELOPE(14.813,14.813,68.567,68.567)
geographic Nipa
geographic_facet Nipa
genre Avian flu
genre_facet Avian flu
op_relation Streaming Media - Rolston (Holmes) Collection
http://hdl.handle.net/10217/178135
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