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Health is a condition of the body, mind, and spirit where an individual remains free from illness. Similarly, wellness is an active state, including living a lifestyle that promotes physical, mental, and emotional health. Physical health is critical for the overall well-being and can be affected by lifestyle, activity level, diet, and behavior. The highest attainable standard of health is a fundamental and universal human right. Consider Lisa, a fifteen-year-old born with congenital...
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In the ever-evolving field of public health, statistical analysis serves as a cornerstone for understanding and managing disease outbreaks. By leveraging various statistical tools, health professionals can predict potential outbreaks, analyze ongoing situations, and devise effective responses to mitigate impact. For that to happen, there are a few possible stages of the analysis:
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Related Experiment Video

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Watershed Planning within a Quantitative Scenario Analysis Framework
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Developing Scenario-Based Strategies for Health, Climate, and Environmental Preparedness: The One Health, One Earth

Azar M Abadi1, Kyle D Brumfield2,3, Moiz Usmani4

  • 1Environmental Health Sciences Department University of Alabama at Birmingham Birmingham AL USA.

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Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Climate change impacts health, but translating science into community health solutions is challenging. A workshop used human-centered design to prototype interventions for infectious diseases, extreme weather, and air quality, emphasizing interdisciplinary collaboration.

Keywords:
One Healthclimate extremescommunityenvironmental healthhuman centered design

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Area of Science:

  • Environmental Health
  • Climate Science
  • Public Health Interventions

Background:

  • Climate change poses significant threats to human health globally.
  • A gap exists in translating climate science into equitable, community-driven health interventions.
  • Interdisciplinary collaboration is crucial for addressing climate-related health risks.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To explore the gap between climate science and community health interventions.
  • To utilize human-centered design for generating actionable health solutions.
  • To identify community needs and prototype interventions for climate-exacerbated health threats.

Main Methods:

  • Human-centered design exercises and stakeholder role-playing.
  • Interdisciplinary workshops involving climate scientists, engineers, epidemiologists, and environmental health experts.
  • Ideation and prototyping of solutions focused on infectious diseases, extreme weather, and air quality.

Main Results:

  • Prototype solutions for anticipatory systems, early warning integration, and inclusive extreme weather response.
  • Development of integrated platforms for visualizing air quality trends and providing tailored guidance.
  • Identification of opportunities in machine learning, Earth observation, and real-time surveillance.

Conclusions:

  • Human-centered approaches can surface user needs and generate prototype concepts for climate-related health issues.
  • Barriers include data quality, technological redundancy, privacy, and governance challenges.
  • Direct community partnership and interdisciplinary teams are essential for effective implementation.