RSPF24 - Plenary 2: Working together to protect public health and the environment

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  • čas přidán 23. 06. 2024
  • Working together to protect public health and the environment - a necessity in the face of global change
    The study of the intrinsic links between plant, animal, human and ecosystem health has led to the development of a transdiciplinary and systemic approach defined under the « One Health » concept. The emergence of new epidemics and zoonotic diseases have often been at the centre of this approach. However, it is becoming increasingly clear that the environmental factors behind health problems are multiple and complex, and that chronic disease prevention must also take account of these complex interactions between the different components of our environment.
    The aim of this session is to demonstrate the value of considering environmental and public health protection together. The importance of protecting and restoring environments and biodiversity in a context where it is urgent to implement adaptation and mitigation policies to combat climate change will be illustrated. The session will focus in particular on describing the co-benefits, for the environment and human health, of nature-based adaptation and mitigation solutions. Examples of actions implemented at different scales will be used to discuss these interactions. Based on these illustrations, we’ll clarify how public health agencies have taken on board these issues and what role they play in the face of these changes.
    MODERATORS
    Sylvie Lemmet, Chair of Santé publique France, Environment Ambassador at the French Ministry for European and Foreign Affairs
    Sébastien Denys, Santé publique France
    PROGRAMME
    Introduction by the moderators
    Climate change - the state of play and future outlook. What are the main risks?
    Laurent Bopp, CNRS, Climate & Environment Science Lab at the IPSL (France), contributor to the IPCC
    Unthinking biodiversity and its implications for human health
    Philippe Grandcolas, CNRS (Institut de systémique, évolution et biodiversité) and French National Museum of Natural History
    A health perspective of the role of the environment in One Health
    Sinaïa Netanyahu, WHO Europe
    Sustainable Campuses and Biodiversity Project
    Alain Sandoz, Environmental Chemistry Laboratory, Université d’Aix-Marseille
    One Health, a framework for collaboration between health agencies
    Matthieu Schuler, Anses
    Pr. Laëtitia Huiart, Santé publique France
    Conclusion by the moderators

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