The One Health AI Assistant is your AI-powered partner for tackling the complex intersections of climate change, public health, animal health, and environmental systems. Built to empower researchers, policy advocates, public servants, educators, and frontline communities, this tool helps you turn frameworks and data into intelligent, actionable strategies.
Climate change is no longer a distant threat—it is a present and escalating public health crisis. It disrupts ecosystems, intensifies infectious disease risks, damages infrastructure, and exacerbates social inequities. Solutions demand a One Health approach—an integrated view that recognizes the interdependence of human, animal, and environmental health.
The One Health AI Assistant makes this systems-level challenge navigable, helping you translate knowledge into policy, planning, and community-level action.
Using the One Health AI Assistant, you can instantly generate:
Strategic project designs for climate-resilient health systems
100-day action plans for community climate adaptation
Concept notes for research funding or pilot programs
To-do lists for training programs, field projects, or multi-stakeholder collaborations
Letters of interest for cross-sectoral partnerships
Memos and briefs for internal stakeholders or elected officials
Policy drafts and ordinances that embed climate-health equity at the local level
Guides and toolkits for practitioners, educators, and community organizers
You simply describe your goal (e.g., “Draft a concept note for a heatwave early warning system in coastal barangays”), and the Assistant works with your uploaded materials to create a first draft instantly.
This AI Assistant is guided by the landmark ASPPH framework for climate change and health, which emphasizes:
Education & Training – Equipping a climate-ready workforce
Research – Advancing systems thinking, equity, and evidence
Practice – Partnering with communities for real-world impact
Policy & Advocacy – Driving health-centered climate governance
The Assistant integrates these pillars into every output, ensuring alignment with best practices in public health and climate adaptation.
All outputs and insights are grounded in three core values:
Environmental and Social Justice – Prioritizing the most affected
Interdisciplinary Collaboration – Bridging sectors, from medicine to planning
Partnerships for Impact – Working with governments, NGOs, academia, and communities
The One Health AI Assistant is ideal for:
Public health and environmental health professionals
Local and national government officials
Climate adaptation program managers
Academics and research institutions
Civil society organizations and advocacy groups
Veterinarians and zoonotic disease experts
Load your resources into the AI Assistant’s NotebookLM workspace—frameworks, policy memos, reports, studies.
Ask a prompt like:
“Design a training program on climate-related infectious diseases.”
“Write a policy brief on the health benefits of urban greening.”
“Generate a 3-phase implementation plan for a One Health surveillance system.”
Refine and use the output to inform, influence, and implement.
We are living through a moment of climate-driven transformation. Whether your work focuses on heat stress, food insecurity, zoonotic outbreaks, or environmental justice—action can’t wait. The One Health AI Assistant accelerates your ability to act with intelligence, clarity, and strategic alignment.
Start using the One Health AI Assistant today.
Put systems thinking and climate justice into every decision.
Strategy & Planning
Create a 100-day action plan for integrating climate and health considerations into a local government health office.
Design a pilot project for a community-based One Health surveillance system.
What are the key steps to establish a climate-resilient health system in a coastal city?
Draft a memo explaining why our university should adopt a Climate and Health curriculum.
Summarize the main strategies from the ASPPH Climate and Health Framework relevant to local governments.
Education & Training
6. Generate a course outline for a graduate-level class on Climate Change and Public Health.
7. List core competencies needed by health professionals to address climate-related risks.
8. Design a training workshop for barangay health workers on extreme heat and human health.
9. Create a short learning module for students on the One Health approach to zoonotic disease.
Research & Evidence Translation
10. Summarize research priorities in climate change and health for grant proposal development.
11. What are the key gaps in climate-health research identified by the ASPPH framework?
12. Generate a plain-language summary of the health impacts of rising temperatures in urban areas.
Practice & Implementation
13. Draft a to-do list for launching a city-wide climate-health vulnerability assessment.
14. Create an implementation guide for including climate-health indicators in local development plans.
15. Suggest a logic model for a community-based adaptation program addressing flood-related health risks.
Policy & Advocacy
16. Write a policy brief advocating for air quality monitoring in urban poor communities.
17. Generate a sample local ordinance to require climate risk assessments in hospital infrastructure planning.
18. Draft a position paper on why climate justice is public health.
Multi-Sectoral Partnerships
19. Identify key government, private sector, and civil society actors for a regional Climate and Health alliance.
20. Draft a concept note for a university-led multi-stakeholder coalition addressing One Health threats from deforestation.