Featured Media
![Talk title overlayed over penguins](/sites/default/files/styles/large/public/2025-01/One_Health_Antarctic_Jan_29_2025_%20spotlight%20thumbnail.png?itok=MgdpzVVf)
Video
February 05, 2025
In this eCornell keynote, Drs. Amandine Gamble and Marie Bouilloud share their recent fieldwork experiences in the Antarctic and sub-Antarctic regions to help illustrate how wildlife health is connected to human activity, even thousands of miles away.
![One Health Asia video screenshot showing a tiger.](/sites/default/files/styles/large/public/2024-03/eCornell%20One%20Health%20Asia%20Simple%20thumbnail.png?itok=DVhQbasa)
Video
April 12, 2024
In this eCornell keynote presentation, Dr. Martin Gilbert, Helen Lee, and Laura Bernert from the Cornell K. Lisa Yang Center for Wildlife Health share their fieldwork experiences in Asia and help illustrate how the health of wildlife and our own health and well-being are inextricably linked.
![A gorilla in the forest.](/sites/default/files/styles/large/public/2023-12/Walking%20with%20Gorillas%20Spotlight%20video%20thumbnail.jpg?itok=p5sg19IJ)
Video
December 15, 2023
Cornell veterinary student Carolina Baquerizo, DVM ‘24, came across this gorilla family while working with Conservation Through Public Health in Bwindi Impenetrable National Park to assess the presence of salmonella in gorillas, livestock and people.
![One Health ad showing a bear cub amongst flowers.](/sites/default/files/styles/large/public/2023-10/One%20Health%20spotlight%20video%20thumnail.png?itok=sNHvOu8T)
Video
October 23, 2023
In this eCornell webinar, Dr. Steve Osofsky, Dr. Krysten Schuler, and Dr. Jennifer Bloodgood of the Cornell Wildlife Health Center at the Cornell College of Veterinary Medicine share their experiences from the field and the lab to illustrate how the health of wildlife and our own health are inextricably linked.
![Carolina Baquerizo and team collecting fecal samples for the study](/sites/default/files/styles/large/public/2023-08/Photo4_0.jpg?itok=NPjgoecW)
August 23, 2023
Working with primates is something I had avoided for a while. Most of my interest has been in southern Africa, with ungulates like giraffes, antelope, and pachyderms being my main focus. Yet I felt that, following the COVID-19 pandemic, learning more about wild primate health would be vital....
![A graphical representation of taking care of the Earth, showing two hands clasping the natural world with buildings in the middle](/sites/default/files/styles/large/public/2022-12/Planetary%20Health%20video%20spotlight%20Pixabay%20image%20thumbnail.jpg?itok=UDHK-f0F)
Video
December 07, 2022
It is no longer possible to separate the health of the planet from the health of its people. Disease patterns are changing as the climate does, and human health is at risk from loss of biodiversity, depleted water supplies, environmental toxins, and collapsing food systems.
![Exploring ways to prevent pandemics symposium](/sites/default/files/styles/large/public/2021-02/Feb%2023%20symposium.png?itok=jsOL_GoW)
Video
March 05, 2021
Watch leading public health and conservation experts discuss how future pandemics can be averted if the world’s governments eliminate unnecessary wildlife trade and adopt holistic One Health approaches. The event was co-hosted by Cornell University and WWF.
Podcast
June 23, 2020
In this Cracking One Health podcast interview, Dr. Steve Osofsky provides a personal perspective on his One Health work in southern Africa, and on his role in the origins of the One Health movement.
![Presentation image of wildlife, wildlife markets, and coronavirus](/sites/default/files/styles/large/public/2020-06/Screenshot%20%28211%29.png?itok=yw1vW9vP)
Video
June 06, 2020
Solving the world’s most pressing health challenges, like the recent efforts to prevent coronavirus spread, requires an interdisciplinary, collaborative approach. While a long-standing platform of Cornell’s mission and vision, this One Health philosophy is now more popular than ever. Learn how Cornell is leading the way in linking human, animal, and ecosystem health.
Podcast
June 02, 2020
This podcast interview focuses on questions our pandemic predicament makes unavoidable, and on the value of using a One Health and Planetary Health lens to inform our answers.