5 results on '"Nguyen-Viet H"'
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2. Ecohealth as a field: looking forward.
- Author
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Saint-Charles J, Webb J, Sanchez A, Mallee H, van Wendel de Joode B, and Nguyen-Viet H
- Subjects
- Capacity Building, Humans, International Cooperation, Ecosystem, Environmental Health, Global Health
- Abstract
This forum paper proposes a reflection on the "field of ecohealth" and on how best to sustain a supportive environment that enables the evolution of diverse partnerships and forms of collaboration in the field. It is based on the results of a preconference workshop held in October 2012, in Kunming, China at the fourth biennial conference of the International Association for Ecology and Health. Attended by 105 persons from 38 countries, this workshop aimed to have a large-group and encompassing discussion about ecohealth as an emerging field, touching on subjects such as actors, processes, structures, standards, and resources. Notes taken were used to conduct a qualitative thematic analysis combined with a semantic network analysis. Commonalities highlighted by these discussions draw a portrait of a field in which human health, complex systems thinking, action, and ecosystem health are considered central issues. The need to reach outside of academia to government and the general public was identified as a shared goal. A disconnect between participants' main concerns and what they perceived as the main concerns of funding agencies emerged as a primary roadblock for the future.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Quantification of diarrhea risk related to wastewater contact in Thailand.
- Author
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Ferrer A, Nguyen-Viet H, and Zinsstag J
- Subjects
- Agricultural Irrigation methods, Entamoeba histolytica pathogenicity, Giardia lamblia pathogenicity, Health Status Indicators, Humans, Risk Assessment, Thailand, Diarrhea parasitology, Entamoeba histolytica isolation & purification, Entamoebiasis parasitology, Giardia lamblia isolation & purification, Giardiasis parasitology, Waste Disposal, Fluid methods, Wastewater parasitology
- Abstract
Wastewater reuse contributes to closing the nutrient recycling loop as a sustainable way of managing water resources. Bangkok has over a thousand man-made drainage and irrigation canals for such purposes. Its use for agricultural and recreational purposes has a long tradition in rural and peri-urban areas. However, the continuation of these practices is increasingly questioned since potential health risks are an issue if such practices are not appropriately managed. The microbial and chemical quality of canal water has considerably deteriorated over the last decade, mainly because of discharged, untreated domestic and industrial wastewater. It is important to understand the health risks of wastewater reuse and identify risky behaviors from the most highly exposed actors promote the safe use of wastewater. This study assessed diarrhea infection risks caused by the use of and contact with wastewater in Klong Luang municipality, a peri-urban setting in Northern Bangkok, using quantitative microbial risk assessment. Wastewater samples were collected from canals, sewers at household level, and vegetables grown in the canals for consumption. Samples were also collected from irrigation water from the agricultural fields. Two protozoa, Giardia lamblia and Entamoeba histolytica, were quantified and analyzed by real-time PCR, exposure assessment was conducted, and finally, the risk of infection due to contact with wastewater in different scenarios was calculated. The results showed that canal water and vegetables were heavily contaminated with G. lamblia and E. histolytica. Infection risk was high in tested scenarios and largely exceeded the acceptable risk given by WHO guidelines.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Zoonotic emerging infectious disease in selected countries in Southeast Asia: insights from ecohealth.
- Author
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Grace D, Gilbert J, Lapar ML, Unger F, Fèvre S, Nguyen-Viet H, and Schelling E
- Subjects
- Animals, Asia, Southeastern, Female, Humans, Interviews as Topic, Male, Research, Social Networking, Communicable Diseases, Emerging prevention & control, Ecosystem, Zoonoses
- Abstract
Most emerging diseases of humans originate in animals, and zoonotic emerging infectious diseases (EIDs) threaten human, animal, and environment health. We report on a scoping study to assess actors, linkages, priorities, and needs related to management of these diseases from the perspective of key stakeholders in three countries in Southeast Asia. A comprehensive interview guide was developed and in-depth interviews completed with 21 key stakeholders in Vietnam, Lao People's Democratic Republic, and Cambodia. We found numerous relevant actors with a predominance of public sector and medical disciplines. More capacity weaknesses than strengths were reported, with risk analysis and research skills most lacking. Social network analysis of information flows showed policy-makers were regarded as mainly information recipients, research institutes as more information providers, and universities as both. Veterinary and livestock disciplines emerged as an important "boundary-spanning" organization with linkages to both human health and rural development. Avian influenza was regarded as the most important zoonotic EID, perhaps reflecting the priority-setting influence of actors outside the region. Stakeholders reported a high awareness of the ecological and socioeconomic drivers of disease emergence and a demand for disease prioritization, epidemiological skills, and economic and qualitative studies. Evaluated from an ecohealth perspective, human health is weakly integrated with socioeconomics, linkages to policy are stronger than to communities, participation occurs mainly at lower levels, and equity considerations are not fully considered. However, stakeholders have awareness of ecological and social determinants of health, and a basis exists on which transdisciplinarity, equity, and participation can be strengthened.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Improving environmental sanitation, health, and well-being: a conceptual framework for integral interventions.
- Author
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Nguyen-Viet H, Zinsstag J, Schertenleib R, Zurbrügg C, Obrist B, Montangero A, Surkinkul N, Koné D, Morel A, Cissé G, Koottatep T, Bonfoh B, and Tanner M
- Subjects
- Cultural Competency, Humans, Socioeconomic Factors, Ecosystem, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice, Models, Biological, Sanitation, Urban Health
- Abstract
We introduce a conceptual framework for improving health and environmental sanitation in urban and peri-urban areas using an approach combining health, ecological, and socioeconomic and cultural assessments. The framework takes into account the three main components: i) health status, ii) physical environment, and iii) socioeconomic and cultural environment. Information on each of these three components can be obtained by using standard disciplinary methods and an innovative combination of these methods. In this way, analyses lead to extended characterization of health, ecological, and social risks while allowing the comprehensive identification of critical control points (CCPs) in relation to biomedical, epidemiological, ecological, and socioeconomic and cultural factors. The proposed concept complements the conventional CCP approach by including an actor perspective that considers vulnerability to risk and patterns of resilience. Interventions deriving from the comprehensive analysis consider biomedical, engineering, and social science perspectives, or a combination of them. By this way, the proposed framework jointly addresses health and environmental sanitation improvements, and recovery and reuse of natural resources. Moreover, interventions encompass not only technical solutions but also behavioral, social, and institutional changes which are derived from the identified resilience patterns. The interventions are assessed with regards to their potential to eliminate or reduce specific risk factors and vulnerability, enhance health status, and assure equity. The framework is conceptualized and validated for the context of urban and peri-urban settings in developing countries focusing on waste, such as excreta, wastewater, and solid waste, their influence on food quality, and their related pathogens, nutrients, and chemical pollutants.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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