“Science And Policy At The Interface Of Environment .

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“Science and Policy at the Interface of Environment, Agriculture and Medicine”CONFERENCE SCIENTIFIC PROGRAMSunday, April 29, 20183:00 pmRegistration OpensOpening SessionMezzanine LevelMeridian Ballroom5:00 pm-5:30 pmConference Welcome and IntroductionsSrirama Rao, Chair, iCOMOS, University of Minnesota5:30 pm-7:15 pmLaureate Panel Discussion: Science and Policy at the Interface ofEnvironment, Agriculture and Medicine - Global Challenges andOpportunitiesModerator: Kerri Miller, Minnesota Public RadioSession Panelists:Peter Agre, Nobel Laureate in Chemistry, United StatesPeter Doherty, Nobel Laureate in Physiology or Medicine, AustraliaHualan Chen, L’Oreal-UNESCO Women-in-Science Laureate, ChinaRobert Mwanga, World Food Prize Laureate, Uganda7:15 pm-8:30 pmOpening Reception and NetworkingMeridian Foyer

2Monday, April 30, 20187:00 am-8:00 amContinental BreakfastMeridian Foyer8:00 am-8:15 amUniversity WelcomeMeridian BallroomEric Kaler, President, University of Minnesota8:15 am-9:00 amNobel Keynote: Opening Doors Worldwide through Medical ScienceNobel Laureate Peter Agre, Johns Hopkins Malaria Research Institute, Johns HopkinsUniversity, United StatesSession I: Social and Economic Impacts on HealthMeridian BallroomSession Summary: The structural factors and conditions in which people are born, grow, live, work, and agedetermine their health. Social determinants of health include factors like socioeconomic status, education,the physical environment, employment, and social support networks, as well as access to health care. Thissession will focus specifically on migration, age, poverty, well-being, and the challenges of antimicrobialresistance, and how these topics influence health and policy.9:00 am-9:05 amModerators: Laura Bloomberg & Beth Virnig, University of Minnesota9:05 am-9:35 amMigration and HealthEric Schwartz, Refugees International, United States9:35 am-10:05 amFamilial Early Onset Alzheimer’s Disease in Colombia:An Opportunity for PreventionFrancisco Lopera, Universidad de Antioquia, Colombia10:05 am-10:30 am Networking Break10:30 am-11:00 am Social and Behavioral Drivers of Antimicrobial ResistanceRamanan Laxminarayan, The Center for Disease Dynamics, Economics & Policy;Princeton University, United States11:00 am-11:30 am Addressing Societal Norms That Affect Well-being Through Transectoral Collaboration: Examples from the FieldLynne Gaffikin, Stanford University, United States11:30 am-12:00 pm Panel Discussion12:00 pm-1:00 pmNetworking LunchMeridian BallroomSession II: Infectious Disease and Environmental DisturbanceMeridian BallroomSession Summary: Speakers will present current science issues pertaining to emerging, zoonotic, and otherinfectious diseases, as well as expert suggestions of mitigation strategies. Note: A summary monograph isanticipated as an outcome of this session.1:00 pm-1:05 pmModerators: Srinand Sreevatsan, Michigan State University and Nick Phelps,University of Minnesota1:05 pm-1:35 pmKeynote: Pandemic Avian Influenza: The Chinese ExperienceHualan Chen, L’Oreal-UNESCO Women-in-Science Laureate, Harbin VeterinaryResearch Institute, China1:35 pm-2:05 pmPredicting and Preventing Emerging Infectious DiseasesWoutrina Smith, University of California, Davis, United States2:05 pm-2:35 pmViral Biocontrol of Invasive Vertebrates: An Australian PerspectiveKen McColl, CSIRO, Australia2:35 pm-3:00 pmNetworking BreakPoster PresentationsSummit & Meridian Foyer3:00 pm-5:45 pm6:00 pm-6:30 pmSocial HourMcNamara Alumni Center6:30 pm-7:30 pmDinnerMcNamara Alumni Center7:30 pm-8:15 pmNobel KeynoteIntroduction: Karen Hanson, Executive Vice President and Provost,University of MinneostaThe Killer DefenseNobel Laureate, Peter Doherty, University of Melbourne, Australia

3Tuesday, May 1, 20187:30 am-8:00 amContinental BreakfastMeridian Foyer8:00 am-8:05 amDay Two WelcomeMeridian BallroomAl Levine, Vice President for Research,University of MinnesotaSession III: Agriculture Advancing HealthMeridian BallroomSession Summary: The future of global health is inextricably linked to agriculture—the key source of humanand animal nutrition and energy. This session will highlight the central role of agriculture in improving health,along with economic and policy issues that intersect with agricultural science. Speakers in this session willexplore engineering and genetic selection of plants for production of medicines and delivery of vaccines infood, growing healthy food in stressed environments, and enhancing food qualities that limit waste, improvenutrition, and increase economic return.8:05 am-8:10 amModerators: Greg Cuomo and Dan Voytas, University of Minnesota8:10 am-8:40 amKeynote: Plant Modification to Reduce Hunger and Improve HealthRobert Mwanga, World Food Prize Laureate, Uganda8:40 am-9:10 amPublic Sector Constraints to Plant Biotechnology for Human Health: The GoldenRice ExperienceAdrian Dubock, Golden Rice Project, Switzerland9:10 am-9:40 amPlants Engineered to Improve HealthDan Voytas, University of Minnesota9:40 am-10:20 amNetworking Break10:20 am-10:50 am The Science and Politics of Livestock Production in the Era of Gene EditingAlison Van Eenennaam, University of California, Davis, United States10:50 am-11:20 am Unravelling the Food–Health NexusCecilia Rocha, Ryerson University, Canada11:20 am-11:50 am Panel Discussion: International Aspects of Food Enhancement and Nourishment11:50 am-12:10 pm Break and Lunch Set-upLunch and Featured SpeakerMeridian Ballroom12:10 pm-1:30 pmSpace, Environment, and HealthPamela Melroy, NASA Astronaut and Space ShuttleCommander, USASession IV: New Paradigms at the Environment-Health InterfaceMeridian BallroomSession Summary: All health problems have some environmental component, yet identifying environmentallinkages in order to focus solutions remains a challenge. Speakers in this session will highlight emergingscientific paradigms—new methods, approaches, and policies that offer new ways of exploring connectionsbetween human, animal, and environmental health—that offer potential for fostering discovery and novelsolutions to complex One Health problems. Speakers will present emerging approaches directed towardlong-term, multidisciplinary, and intersectoral health research and policy making.1:30 pm-1:35 pmModerators: Bruce Alexander, University of Minnesota and Kimberly Thigpen Tart,National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, NIH1:35 pm-2:20 pmKeynote: Environmental Health Without and Within: From Ecosystems toCommunities to the MicrobiomeLinda Birnbaum, National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, NIH, UnitedStates2:20 pm-2:35 pmEnvironmental Health through the Lens of Global UrbanizationMaria Neira, Department of Public Health, Environmental and Social Determinants ofHealth, World Health Organization, Switzerland2:35 pm-3:00 pmClimate Change and HealthKristie Ebi, Center for Health and the Global Environment, University of Washington,United States

4Session IV Continued3:00 pm-3:25 pmNetworking Break3:25 pm-3:50 pmPlanetary Health: Protecting Global Health on a Rapidly Changing PlanetSamuel Myers, Planetary Health Alliance, United States3:50 pm-4:40 pmPanel Discussion: New Education and Policy Paradigms at the Interface ofEnvironment and HealthModerators: Jessica Hellmann and Dominic Travis, University of Minnesota4:40 pm-4:50 pmOverview of iCOMOS 2019 and iCOMOS 2020iCOMOS 2019: Chiang Mai University, Chiang Mai, ThailandiCOMOS 2020: Universidad Andres Bello, Santiago, Chile4:50 pm-5:00 pmOutlook for the Future and Overview of the Concurrent Interactive SessionsMichael Murtaugh, Co-Chair, iCOMOS 2018, University of Minnesota5:00 pmDay 2 Concludes - Free Time (on your own)Wednesday, May 2, 20187:30 am-8:25 am8:25 am-8:30 am8:30 am-9:00 am9:00 am-9:15 amContinental BreakfastMeridian BallroomWelcomeTrevor Ames, Dean, College of Veterinary MedicineKeynote - Getting Ahead of the Curve: Using Earth Observations to PredictHealth RisksJuli Trtantj, Climate and Health Lead, National Oceanic and AtmosphericAdministration, USARearrangement of rooms for Concurrent Interactive SessionsConcurrent Interactive Sessions (CIS)Sessions begin at 9:15 am. See individual schedules for details.CIS 1:CIS 2:CIS 3:CIS 4:CIS 5:One Medicine One Science Approaches to Health at TwoNIH InstitutesEffective Policy When Consumer Preferences (Food andHealth) Do Not Match ActionsBreaking Silos and Building Bridges Within and AcrossGeographies for Workforce Development Needs andImplementation ProgramsPrecision Medicine and Genome Editing: Science andEthicsScience Communication and Strategic Engagement ofPolicy MakersMeridian 1Think Room 4Meridian 3Meridian 4Meridian 2

5CIS 1: One Medicine One Science Approaches to Health at Two NIH Institutes9:15 am-6:00 pm Meridian 1Coordinators: Hortencia Hornbeak and Peter Jackson, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases,NIH and Heather Henry, National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, NIHSession Summary: This session will explore One Medicine One Science (OMOS) approaches applied by twoNIH institutes to complex human health issues requiring coordinated, multidisciplinary research programs andteams. Senior institute staff and funded investigators of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases(NIAID) and the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS) will lead discussions of Zika asa case study of an emerging disease and pandemic threat, and studies of chronic disease resulting from theinteractions of living systems with environmental threats such as chemicals and other contaminants that affect human health. Presentations will feature diverse NIH-supported, OMOS-related research studies, as wellas methods and resources for integrating OMOS approaches into aspects of infectious disease and environmental health research including surveillance, epidemiology, prevention and intervention, data collection andanalysis, partnership building, and training and capacity building.Welcome, Jakub Tolar, Interim Vice President for Health Sciences, University of Minnesota9:15am-9:30amIntroduction: One Medicine, One Science at Two Institutes of the NIHHortencia Hornbeak, NIAID, NIH and Kimberly Thigpen Tart, NIEHS, NIHOMOS in Infectious Disease Research: Zika Case StudyModerator: Hortencia Hornbeak, NIAID, NIH9:30 am-9:55 amZika Epidemiology/Control/PathologyEsper Kallas, University Medical School of Sao Paolo, Brazil9:55 am-10:20 amZika and Other Zoonotic Diseases: Lessons Learned in Puerto RicoJosé Cordero, University of Georgia, United States10:20 am-10:35 am Break10:35 am-11:00 am Pan-Viral Analyses of a Novel Antiviral StrategyLou Mansky, University of Minnesota, United States11:00 am-11:25 am Vaccine Preparedness for Viral PandemicsBarney Graham, NIAID, NIH Vaccine Research Center, United States11:25 am-12:00 pm Panel Discussion and Q&A12:00 pm-1:00 pmNetworking LunchOMOS in Environmental Health ResearchModerator: Heather Henry, NIEHS, NIH1:00 pm-1:25 pmThe Use of Sentinel Species in Health Disparities ResearchFrank Von Hippel, Northern Arizona University, United States1:25 pm-1:50 pmChronic Kidney Disease, Pollution, and Sentinel Species in Sri LankaNishad Jayasundara, University of Maine, United States1:50 pm-2:15 pmOne Health Approach to the Impacts of The Deepwater Horizon Oil SpillMaureen Lichtveld, Tulane University, United States2:15 pm-2:35 pmPanel Discussion and Q&A2:35 pm-2:50 pmBreakPrograms, Resources, and Tools for Integrating One Medicine One Science Approaches to HealthModerator: Kimberly Thigpen Tart, NIEHS, NIH2:50 pm-3:15 pmOne Science, Many Needs: Global Training and Capacity Building at NIEHSJohn Balbus, NIEHS, NIH, United States3:15 pm-3:40 pmBuilding Clinical and Research CapacityGray Handley, NIAID, NIH, United States3:40 pm-4:05 pmGlobal Perspectives on Access to Bio-Samples and Data SharingYaffa Rubinstein, U.S. National Library of Medicine, United States4:05 pm-4:15 pmNIAID Mechanisms and Initiatives Supportive of OMOS ResearchSusana Mendez and Amir Zeituni, NIAID, NIH

6CIS 1 Continued4:15 pm-4:25 pm4:25 pm-4:45 pm4:45 pm-6:00 pmNIEHS Programs and Funding Mechanisms Used to Support Research in anOMOS FrameworkHeather Henry, NIEHS, NIHPanel Discussion, Q&A, and Wrap-UpModerators: Heather Henry, NIEHS, NIH and Hortencia Hornbeak, NIAID, NIHSmall Group Meetings with NIH Administrators and Other Federal Staff

7CIS 2: Effective Policy When Consumer Preferences (Food and Health)Do Not Match Actions9:15 am-5:00 pm Think Room 4Coordinators: Shaun Kennedy, The Food System Institute and the University of Minnesota andWantanee Kalpravidh, Emergency Center for Transboundary Animal Diseases,Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, Regional Office for Asia and the PacificSession Summary: The public in general, or a significant subset, often drive specific food and health policiesas governments and the private sector attempt to meet their expressed desires. The challenge for effectivepolicy implementation, however, is that consumers do not always choose health behaviors or foods that areconsistent with their priorities. This is especially challenging when consumers make choices based on onepriority that appears to conflict with other expressed priorities. While not a new concept in philosophy or whatis sometimes called moral mathematics, it is not generally applied when developing and implementing healthand food policies. This is easy to understand when it is an economic priority, cost, overriding a personal priority,enhanced food safety, with simple choices such as not purchasing irradiated ground beef for food safetydue to the cost of irradiation. It becomes far more complicated to implement effective policy when it is morenuanced such as consumers making health or food choices that are demonstrably less favorable to their ownfamily’s health or the environment than alternatives. This workshop will look at how to consider health or foodpolicies in the face of competitive, unexpressed or conflicting priorities and the extent to which the policies canachieve their objectives. It will draw beyond policy experts to include experts in consumer behavior, individualto group dynamics, game theory and economics from the academic, public and private sectors to considerpolicy differently.Anticipated outcomes from the session include at least two papers: (1) The similarities between outwardly verydifferent policy areas (obesity, food safety, food security, and autism); and (2) Proposed new strategies to addressthese important policy areas.Case Studies in Priorities and Choices Conflicts9:15 am-9:30 amWelcome and Overview9:30 am-10:00 amThe Efficacy of Avian Influenza Control Policies in Light of ConflictingStakeholders’ PreferencesDamian Tago Pacheco, Emergency Center for Transboundary Animal Diseases (ECTAD) of the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO)How Consumers Really Make Food Purchasing Decisions,Not How They Say They DoDarren Seifer, The NPD GroupBreak10:00 am-10:30 am10:30 am-10:45 am10:45 am-11:15 amThe Politics Surrounding AutismDana Baker, Political Science, California State University, Channel Islands11:15 am-11:45 amMarkets, Educational Programs and Other Non-regulatory Policy Approaches toAdvancing Food Security: Examples from BrazilCecilia Rocha, School of Nutrition, Ryerson University, CanadaNetworking Lunch11:45 am -12:45 pm12:45 pm-1:30 pm1:30 pm-2:30 pmVoting Procedures to Choose Leaders and Policies That Produce Consensus(Rather Than Division)Steven Brams, Department of Politics, New York UniversitySmall Group Discussion – Exploring the Gaps Between Policy and Behavior2:30 pm-2:45 pmBreak2:45 pm-3:15 pmReporting Back

8CIS 2 Continued3:15 pm-4:15 pmSmall Group Discussion – New Strategies for Regulatory and Non-RegulatoryPolicy4:15 pm-4:45 pm4:45 pm-5:00 pmReporting BackClosing Remarks and Next Steps5:00 pmSession Ends

9CIS 3: Breaking Silos and Building Bridges Within and Across Geographies forOne Medicine, One Science: Workforce Development Needs and Implementation Programs9:15 am-5:00 pm Meridian 3Coordinators: Andres Perez and Katey Pelican, University of Minnesota; Aziz Arda Sancak, AnkaraUniversity, TurkeySession Summary: Despite an increasingly popular One Health rhetoric, authentic examples of multipledisciplinary efforts to transcend the traditional silos of public, animal, and environmental health are still rare.The ultimate goal of COMOS is to contribute to securing food and protecting health of human, animals,and the environment through a network of equal partners. Prerequisite for accomplishing that goal is thedevelopment of the required workforce to identify problems and provide solutions to recurrent and emerginggrand challenges regionally and globally. In this workshop, we will provide an overview of needs assessmentand implementation programs in the areas of food animal trade and one health. Capacity building programs,including issues related with needs assessment, implementation, and evaluation, for veterinary and publichealth will be presented. Multisectoral approaches to identify and address emerging needs and issues willbe introduced. Regional perspectives on gaps and challenges will be discussed. Finally, a debate focused onparticular opportunities identified during the session for workforce development at regional and global scaleswill be promoted.AudienceScientists, intergovernmental organizations, students, industry partners, and stakeholdersengaged or interested in workforce development and education on ecosystems health, agribusiness, food production, economics and policy regionally and globally.Outcomes A “perspective” paper outlining the vision for workforce development in the context ofCOMOS Proposals for workforce development and capacity building of veterinary services and OneHealth, promoting regional and global alliances Outline plans for the organization of iCOMOS in the Ibero-American region in 2020TimelineCompletion of paper within 3 months of the workshop to be shared with funding agencies andsponsors. Continue to support regional activities for COMOS.ScientificOutline of a plan for development of educational and outreach programs in the context ofValueCOMOSSession 1: Unfolding the OMOS Paradigm Shift Through Capacity Building ProgramsModerator: Andres Perez, University of Minnesota, United States9:15 am-9:30 amPresentation, Introduction, and ExpectationsAndres Perez, University of Minnesota, United States9:30 am-9:45 amThe Agrovet ProjectBrigitte von Rechenberg, Vetsuisse Faculty ZH, University of Zurich, Switzerland9:45 am-10:00 am10:00 am-10:15 am10:15 am-10:30 am10:30 am-10:45 amImplementing Programs for Capacity Building of Veterinary Services at a GlobalScaleFrancois Caya, OIE, FranceThe ProgRESSVet Capacity Building Program for Latin American VeterinaryServicesEmilio León, CEBASEV, OIE Collaborating Center in Buenos Aires, Argentina, andMary Katherine O’Brien, CAHFS, OIE Collaborating Center in MinnesotaBreakCapacity Building Program for Sustainable Implementation of OIE Standards - ATraining for the Improvement of Veterinary Services PerformAgnes Leblond and Vincent Brioudes, ENSV, OIE Collaborating Center, Lyon, France

10CIS 3 Continued10:45 am-11:00 am11:00 am-11:15 am11:15 am-11:30 am11:30 am-11:50 am11:50 am-12:00 pm12:00 pm-1:30 pmEmerging Needs and Opportunities for Capacity Building in Southern AsiaTongkorn Meeyam, Chiang Mai University, ThailandEmerging Needs and Opportunities for Capacity Building in Western AfricaYalace Kaboret, Ecole Inter Etats des Sciences et Medecine Veterinaires, Dakar,SenegalRoundtable Discussion: Emerging Needs and Opportunities for CapacityBuilding of Veterinary ServicesCaya, Leon, O’Brien, LeBlond, Brioudes, Meeyam and KaboretRoundtable Presentation and Discussion: Emerging Needs and Opportunities forCapacity Building in AquacultureFernando Mardones, Universidad Andres Bello, Chile and Rolando Ibarra, SalmonTechnological Institute (INTESAL), ChileCon

(NIAID) and the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS) will lead discussions of Zika as a case study of an emerging disease and pandemic threat, and studies of chronic disease resulting from the interactions of living systems with environmental threats such as chemicals and other contaminants that af-fect human health.

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