What is the One Health approach, and how to implement it?

Dr. Ulrike Doyle
Jens Schönfeld
Dr. Patrick Schröder
Dr. Kathi Westphal-Settele
22.12.2020

The current coronavirus pandemic has refocused attention on the fact that more than two thirds of known infectious diseases in humans originated in animals. The majority of infectious diseases that have emerged in recent years were transmitted from wild animals or farm livestock to humans.

In response to this problem, the One Health approach has been developed over the course of the last decade. It is an holistic, interdisciplinary approach that works on local, regional, national and global levels to protect human health considering animal health and environmental health. The aim of this approach is “optimal health and well-being outcomes recognizing the interconnections between people …

Dr. Ulrike Doyle

German Environment Agency
Ulrike Doyle has been a research associate at the German Environment Agency since 1994. From 2003 to 2016, she worked at the German Advisory Council...

Jens Schönfeld

German Environment Agency
Jens Schönfeld joined the German Environment Agency in 2007 as a research associate, and now works in the IV2.2 Medicinal Products Department. His...

Dr. Patrick Schröder

German Environment Agency
Dr. Patrick Schröder (D.Eng) joined the German Environment Agency as a research associate in 2019 and works in the IV2.2 Medicinal Products Department...

Dr. Kathi Westphal-Settele

German Environment Agency
Dr. Kathi Westphal-Settele has been a research associate at the German Environment Agency since 2012 and works in the IV2.2 Medicinal Products...

How environmental policy stakeholders could respond to social changes caused by the pandemic

Anne Klatt
30.11.2020

The crisis has created situations and images that seemed utopian in "normal" times, in addition to the manifold, sometimes serious, negative social and socio-economic consequences of the COVID-19 pandemic: Inner cities with less traffic, wild animals reclaiming their habitats, a reduction to the essentials. Some of the consequences will fade away, others will have a longer-term impact on the future and change the social context of environmental policy action. It is against this background that we (Anne Klatt, Laura Spengler, Kathrin Schwirn and Christian Löwe) have addressed two questions in a discussion paper:

What social impacts of the pandemic are environmentally relevant?
How could and

Anne Klatt

German Environment Agency
Anne Klatt works as a research assistant at the German Environment Agency in the department "Fundamental Aspects, Sustainability Strategies and...

Sustainability Transformations and Covid

Dr. Sandeep Kaur-Ghumaan
06.10.2020

Over the past several decades, the global community was following a development model that seemed unsustainable. The adopted path of development led to consequences with a potential for serious impact on the environment, economies and societies. COVID-19 crisis precipitated the situation by transforming it from a dangerous regional health threat to an all-consuming global pandemic and economic disaster. It also holds potential for changes that could be quite devastating in the future. Since COVID-19 has affected all parts of the world, there is a pressing need for governments to coordinate and act in unison across regions and countries. To avoid the kind of crossroads at which we stand today …

Dr. Sandeep Kaur-Ghumaan

University of Delhi
Sandeep Kaur-Ghumaan is a chemist from India working in the area of developing alternative renewable energy resources. She works as Assistant...

Considering involving stakeholders after COVID: or – there is no good except doing!

Dr. Harald Ginzky
28.09.2020

During the early days of the lockdown due to the coronavirus pandemic a “witty expression” did the rounds on social media in Germany. “Now the young are helping the old” - by not attending parties and staying at home. “Tomorrow (after the pandemic) the old will help the young” - by – finally – adapting their lifestyle to the challenges of climate change.

Although it was meant to be funny, there is a key message to this: actions and measures are required for solutions and the needed changes to have a chance. It might sound trivial, but it’s important. After all, in the past the scientific and political debate has often too much focused on the “what” and somewhat neglected the “who” and the …

Dr. Harald Ginzky

German Environment Agency
Dr. Harald Ginzky works as research and policy officer at the German Environment Agency. He deals with the topics Climate Geo-Engineering, protection...

Navigating abrupt system changes

Prof. Dr. Ilona M. Otto
11.09.2020

Irrespective of the health issues, the coronavirus pandemic that we are currently experiencing demonstrates that rapid and radical responses of governments and business, as well as rapid lifestyle changes, are possible. Suddenly, we’ve found we are able to adjust personal habits and routines (e.g. not shaking hands), change travel plans (e.g. give up on holidays abroad), and adjust business practices (e.g. move meetings online, allow working from home).  Have these actions affected GDP growth and generated economic costs? Yes, of course! Is it a problem? There are concerns, but the majority of citizens and media perceives such changes as necessary, and even desired, in order to reduce the …

Prof. Dr. Ilona M. Otto

Wegener Center for Climate and Global Change, University of Graz
Prof. Dr. Ilona M. Otto is a newly appointed Professor in Societal Impacts of Climate Change at the Wegener Center for Climate and Global Change...