PodcastsRank #37412
Artwork for One World, One Health

One World, One Health

SciencePodcastsEN-USunited-states
5 / 5
One World, One Health is brought to you by the One Health Trust. In this podcast, we bring you the latest ideas to improve the health of our planet and its people. Our world faces many urgent challenges from pandemics and decreasing biodiversity to pollution and melting polar ice caps, among others. This podcast highlights solutions to these problems from the scientists and experts working to make a difference.
Top 74.8% by pitch volume (Rank #37412 of 50,000)Data updated Feb 10, 2026

Key Facts

Publishes
N/A
Episodes
97
Founded
N/A
Category
Science
Number of listeners
Private
Hidden on public pages

Listen to this Podcast

Pitch this podcast
Get the guest pitch kit.
Book a quick demo to unlock the outreach details you actually need before you hit send.
  • Verified contact + outreach fields
  • Exact listener estimates (not just bands)
  • Reply rate + response timing signals
10 minutes. Friendly walkthrough. No pressure.
Book a demo
Public snapshot
Audience: Under 4K / month
Canonical: https://podpitch.com/podcasts/one-world-one-health
Reply rate: Under 2%

Latest Episodes

Back to top

Saving Lives with Midwives

Tue Jan 20 2026

Listen

Send us a text Having a baby should be safe. Yet it’s far too often a death sentence for both the mother and the baby. An estimated 260,000 women died in 2023 during and right after giving birth, and those numbers will have risen with the loss of United States global aid dollars. There are ways to improve this – better prenatal care is an obvious one. According to the World Health Organization, women giving birth most often die from severe bleeding, infections, or other complications. Pregnant women also die from high blood pressure or from unsafe abortions or complications of miscarriage. If women can get the right medical care during pregnancy, delivery, and after childbirth, the risk of death plummets. But doctors and nurses can be scarce, especially in lower-income countries. Women also often fear going to hospitals or clinics, mistrust them, or simply lack the money to make use of them.  A much easier solution is a properly trained midwife. The International Confederation of Midwives supports groups that train and advocate for midwives, who can help ensure safe births. Some countries even have programs to train and license midwives. Professor Doreen Kaura of the University of the Western Cape in Belville, South Africa heads one such program. She also conducts research into the effects of midwifery practice. Not only can well-trained midwives provide high-level medical care for pregnant and delivering women, but they can take into account cultural beliefs and practices that earn trust and ensure that women show up for the lifesaving care they need, Kaura has found. “Respectful care is not optional,” she says. Listen here as she tells One World, One Health about the benefits of midwives and how they can save both lives and money.

More

Send us a text Having a baby should be safe. Yet it’s far too often a death sentence for both the mother and the baby. An estimated 260,000 women died in 2023 during and right after giving birth, and those numbers will have risen with the loss of United States global aid dollars. There are ways to improve this – better prenatal care is an obvious one. According to the World Health Organization, women giving birth most often die from severe bleeding, infections, or other complications. Pregnant women also die from high blood pressure or from unsafe abortions or complications of miscarriage. If women can get the right medical care during pregnancy, delivery, and after childbirth, the risk of death plummets. But doctors and nurses can be scarce, especially in lower-income countries. Women also often fear going to hospitals or clinics, mistrust them, or simply lack the money to make use of them.  A much easier solution is a properly trained midwife. The International Confederation of Midwives supports groups that train and advocate for midwives, who can help ensure safe births. Some countries even have programs to train and license midwives. Professor Doreen Kaura of the University of the Western Cape in Belville, South Africa heads one such program. She also conducts research into the effects of midwifery practice. Not only can well-trained midwives provide high-level medical care for pregnant and delivering women, but they can take into account cultural beliefs and practices that earn trust and ensure that women show up for the lifesaving care they need, Kaura has found. “Respectful care is not optional,” she says. Listen here as she tells One World, One Health about the benefits of midwives and how they can save both lives and money.

Key Metrics

Back to top
Pitches sent
8
From PodPitch users
Rank
#37412
Top 74.8% by pitch volume (Rank #37412 of 50,000)
Average rating
5.0
Ratings count may be unavailable
Reviews
1
Written reviews (when available)
Publish cadence
N/A
Episode count
97
Data updated
Feb 10, 2026
Social followers
2.7K

Public Snapshot

Back to top
Country
United States
Language
EN-US
Language (ISO)
Release cadence
N/A
Latest episode date
Tue Jan 20 2026

Audience & Outreach (Public)

Back to top
Audience range
Under 4K / month
Public band
Reply rate band
Under 2%
Public band
Response time band
Private
Hidden on public pages
Replies received
Private
Hidden on public pages

Public ranges are rounded for privacy. Unlock the full report for exact values.

Presence & Signals

Back to top
Social followers
2.7K
Contact available
Yes
Masked on public pages
Sponsors detected
Private
Hidden on public pages
Guest format
Private
Hidden on public pages

Social links

No public profiles listed.

Demo to Unlock Full Outreach Intelligence

We publicly share enough context for discovery. For actionable outreach data, unlock the private blocks below.

Audience & Growth
Demo to unlock
Monthly listeners49,360
Reply rate18.2%
Avg response4.1 days
See audience size and growth. Demo to unlock.
Contact preview
o***@hidden
Get verified host contact details. Demo to unlock.
Sponsor signals
Demo to unlock
Sponsor mentionsLikely
Ad-read historyAvailable
View sponsorship signals and ad read history. Demo to unlock.
Book a demo

How To Pitch One World, One Health

Back to top

Want to get booked on podcasts like this?

Become the guest your future customers already trust.

PodPitch helps you find shows, draft personalized pitches, and hit send faster. We share enough public context for discovery; for actionable outreach data, unlock the private blocks.

  • Identify shows that match your audience and offer.
  • Write pitches in your voice (nothing sends without you).
  • Move from “maybe later” to booked interviews faster.
  • Unlock deeper outreach intelligence with a quick demo.

This show is Rank #37412 by pitch volume, with 8 pitches sent by PodPitch users.

Book a demoBrowse more shows10 minutes. Friendly walkthrough. No pressure.
5 / 5
RatingsN/A
Written reviews1

We summarize public review counts here; full review text aggregation is not shown on PodPitch yet.

Frequently Asked Questions About One World, One Health

Back to top

What is One World, One Health about?

One World, One Health is brought to you by the One Health Trust. In this podcast, we bring you the latest ideas to improve the health of our planet and its people. Our world faces many urgent challenges from pandemics and decreasing biodiversity to pollution and melting polar ice caps, among others. This podcast highlights solutions to these problems from the scientists and experts working to make a difference.

How often does One World, One Health publish new episodes?

One World, One Health publishes on a variable schedule.

How many listeners does One World, One Health get?

PodPitch shows a public audience band (like "Under 4K / month"). Book a demo to unlock exact audience estimates and how we calculate them.

How can I pitch One World, One Health?

Use PodPitch to access verified outreach details and pitch recommendations for One World, One Health. Start at https://podpitch.com/try/1.

Which podcasts are similar to One World, One Health?

This page includes internal links to similar podcasts. You can also browse the full directory at https://podpitch.com/podcasts.

How do I contact One World, One Health?

Public pages only show a masked contact preview. Book a demo to unlock verified email and outreach fields.

Quick favor for your future self: want podcast bookings without the extra mental load? PodPitch helps you find shows, draft personalized pitches, and hit send faster.