TY - JOUR
T1 - Developing Scenario-Based Strategies for Health, Climate, and Environmental Preparedness
T2 - The One Health, One Earth Approach
AU - Abadi, Azar M.
AU - Brumfield, Kyle D.
AU - Usmani, Moiz
AU - Jiang, Gemma
AU - Chakraborty, T. C.
AU - Wang, Yuzhou
AU - Zhou, Zhijie
AU - He, Cenlin
AU - Qiu, Minghao
AU - Stowell, Jennifer D.
AU - Fritz, Douglas
AU - Kumar, Sunil
AU - Guo, Qiang
AU - Xiong, Ying
AU - Destouni, Georgia
AU - Xiao, Qian
AU - Hu, Xindi C.
AU - Fong, Kelvin C.
AU - Hang, Yun
AU - Nielsen-Gammon, John
AU - Habre, Rima
AU - Bratburd, Jennifer R.
AU - Tessum, Christopher W.
AU - Jutla, Antarpreet
AU - Colwell, Rita R.
AU - Filippelli, Gabriel M.
AU - Nguyen, Thanh H.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2026. The Author(s). GeoHealth published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of American Geophysical Union.
PY - 2026/4
Y1 - 2026/4
N2 - Climate change amplifies many threats to human health. Despite advances in understanding climate change dynamics and impacts, there remains a critical gap in translating scientific knowledge into equitable, and community-driven health interventions. The inaugural One Earth, One Health workshop sought to explore this gap through human-centered design exercises involving interdisciplinary researchers from climate and Earth sciences, engineering, epidemiology, microbiology, and environmental health. Although participants did not co-develop solutions with affected communities, they used stakeholder role-playing to guide ideation and lay groundwork for actionable plans. Through these methods, participants identified community needs and proposed prototype solutions to alleviate health threats exacerbated by global environmental change. Prototypes were organized around infectious diseases, extreme weather, and air quality, as illustrative themes rather than an exhaustive set of risks. Key solutions included strategies for anticipatory systems and early warning (e.g., integrating environmental signals with health data), inclusive communication and infrastructure needs for responding to extreme weather events, and integrated platforms visualizing air quality trends to support tailored, context-aware guidance beyond one-size-fits-all alerts. The workshop highlighted opportunities such as leveraging machine learning, Earth observation, and real-time surveillance to protect communities, but also noted barriers including data quality, technological redundancy, privacy, and governance challenges. Additionally, participants emphasized the need for interdisciplinary teams capable of collaborating across sectors, breaking down silos and addressing gaps in training and education. Overall, the workshop illustrates how process-driven, human-centered approaches can help surface user needs and generate testable prototype concepts, while underscoring the importance of direct community partnership for implementation.
AB - Climate change amplifies many threats to human health. Despite advances in understanding climate change dynamics and impacts, there remains a critical gap in translating scientific knowledge into equitable, and community-driven health interventions. The inaugural One Earth, One Health workshop sought to explore this gap through human-centered design exercises involving interdisciplinary researchers from climate and Earth sciences, engineering, epidemiology, microbiology, and environmental health. Although participants did not co-develop solutions with affected communities, they used stakeholder role-playing to guide ideation and lay groundwork for actionable plans. Through these methods, participants identified community needs and proposed prototype solutions to alleviate health threats exacerbated by global environmental change. Prototypes were organized around infectious diseases, extreme weather, and air quality, as illustrative themes rather than an exhaustive set of risks. Key solutions included strategies for anticipatory systems and early warning (e.g., integrating environmental signals with health data), inclusive communication and infrastructure needs for responding to extreme weather events, and integrated platforms visualizing air quality trends to support tailored, context-aware guidance beyond one-size-fits-all alerts. The workshop highlighted opportunities such as leveraging machine learning, Earth observation, and real-time surveillance to protect communities, but also noted barriers including data quality, technological redundancy, privacy, and governance challenges. Additionally, participants emphasized the need for interdisciplinary teams capable of collaborating across sectors, breaking down silos and addressing gaps in training and education. Overall, the workshop illustrates how process-driven, human-centered approaches can help surface user needs and generate testable prototype concepts, while underscoring the importance of direct community partnership for implementation.
KW - One Health
KW - climate extremes
KW - community
KW - environmental health
KW - human centered design
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105034537950
U2 - 10.1029/2025GH001674
DO - 10.1029/2025GH001674
M3 - Comment/debate
AN - SCOPUS:105034537950
SN - 2471-1403
VL - 10
JO - GeoHealth
JF - GeoHealth
IS - 4
M1 - e2025GH001674
ER -