id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt cord-267188-1ldynibm Woldehanna, Sara An expanded One Health model: Integrating social science and One Health to inform study of the human-animal interface 2014-11-01 .txt text/plain 8040 320 45 The expanded model informed a new study approach to document the extent of human exposure to animals and explore the interplay of social and environmental factors that influence risk of transmission at the individual and community level. In this paper we propose an expanded One Health model that highlights the social determinants of human-animal exposure, describe a study approach that operationalizes the model to explore factors that influence the risk of transmission at the individual and community level and present some results that illustrate the effect of social factors on how people interact with animals. Finally, social factors also determine who is at risk from eating different meats: eating rats is an equal source of exposure for adults and children in both ethnic groups; the Hmong are more exposed to nonhuman primates and the Lao-Tai to bats as a result of eating; and men are more intensely exposed as they are more likely to eat raw meat compared to women. ./cache/cord-267188-1ldynibm.txt ./txt/cord-267188-1ldynibm.txt