9. Increase public recognition of One Health problems and solutions The public should be given transparent access to data sets and risk assessments on species declines/ extinctions, infectious diseases, nutritional and lifestyle diseases, poisoning, climate change, warfare, and more, with links to information on underlying societal drivers, and ways to protect their families, animals, plants, communities, and ecosystems. They should be able to recognize where and when local to global human activities and interactions are forcing death and destruction, a new era with a high plane of One Health, or something in between. Researchers should determine whether the transparent reporting contributes to grassroots, business, and political support for effective One Health stewardship.