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EN-7. How to achieve a truly comprehensive ecology of health
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Descriptif
Bernard Swynghedauw speaks in favour of a truly comprehensive ecology of health. He especially wants to better take into account the microbiota in the public health issues. He also raises the question of the capacity of humans to get used to themselves.
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Biodiversity and health - Introduction
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EN-2. The most biodiversity-related elements to health
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EN-4. Microbial biodiversity changes caused by human activity
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Biodiversity and the city - Introduction
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EN-1. Health and biodiversity: what links
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EN-11. Services rendered by the urban biodiversity
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EN-9. The urban biodiversity
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EN-3. The microbiota we host: a limited but specific ecosystem
SwynghedauwBernardBernard Swynghedauw comes back to the microbiota we host, that is the bacterial life we coexist and coevolve with. He evidences its distribution inside our organism, some factors which are responsible
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EN-12. What determines the quality of urban biodiversity ?
MachonNathalieNathalie Machon presents some factors influencing the quality of the urban biodiversity: climate, soil features, age of the habitat, fragmentation and heterogeneity of the green areas... She concludes
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EN-6. Emerging risks and diseases
SwynghedauwBernardBernard Swynghedauw proposes an overview of the new medical landscape, marked by the emergence of several risks and diseases. He especially explores the age, the infectious risk and the immune risk,
Avec les mêmes intervenants et intervenantes
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EN-3. The microbiota we host: a limited but specific ecosystem
SwynghedauwBernardBernard Swynghedauw comes back to the microbiota we host, that is the bacterial life we coexist and coevolve with. He evidences its distribution inside our organism, some factors which are responsible
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EN-6. Emerging risks and diseases
SwynghedauwBernardBernard Swynghedauw proposes an overview of the new medical landscape, marked by the emergence of several risks and diseases. He especially explores the age, the infectious risk and the immune risk,
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EN-1. Health and biodiversity: what links
SwynghedauwBernardBernard Swynghedauw defines the biodiversity, the health, and the disease. He evidences the importance of the environmental and / or genetic factors in the appearance of diseases. He also links the
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EN-4. Microbial biodiversity changes caused by human activity
SwynghedauwBernardBernard Swynghedauw talks about the microbial biodiversity. He first defines it, then he highlights the changes which affect it, related to the human activities. He also brings us data regarding the
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EN-2. The most biodiversity-related elements to health
SwynghedauwBernardBernard Swynghedauw presents the main groups of living organisms (prokaryotes, eukaryotes, virus), and evokes the link between this biodiversity and the health, insisting on two aspects: the dilution
-
EN-5. The new medical landscape, emerging risks and diseases
SwynghedauwBernardBernard Swynghedauw proposes an overview of the epidemiological transitions over the last centuries, with a decrease of the mortality linked to the infections, and an increase of the mortality linked
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7. Pour une écologie vraiment globale de la santé
SwynghedauwBernardBernard Swynghedauw plaide dans cette présentation pour une écologie globale de la santé, cherchant notamment à mieux prendre en compte le microbiote dans les questions de santé publique. Il pose en
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6. Les risques et les affections émergents
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3. Le microbiote qui nous habite : un écosystème limité mais particulier
SwynghedauwBernardBernard Swynghedauw revient sur le microbiote qui nous habite, à savoir le monde bactérien avec lequel nous coexistons et nous co-évoluons. Il met en évidence sa distribution au sein de notre
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5. Le nouveau paysage médical, les émergences et les émergences orphelines
SwynghedauwBernardBernard Swynghedauw propose dans cette intervention un aperçu des transitions épidémiologiques de ces derniers siècles, avec notamment une diminution de la mortalité liée aux infections et un
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2. Les éléments de la biodiversité qui concernent le plus la santé
SwynghedauwBernardDans cette intervention, Bernard Swynghedauw présente les grands groupes d'organismes vivants (procaryotes, eucaryotes, virus), et évoque le lien entre cette biodiversité et la santé en insistant sur
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4. Changements de la biodiversité microbienne dus à l'activité humaine
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