Citation

BibTex format

@article{Ulrich:2025:ofid/ofaf395,
author = {Ulrich, AK and Moua, NM and Mack, A and Imai-Eaton, N and Staples, JE and Mehr, AJ and Ostrowsky, JT and Leighton, T and Cehovin, A and Fay, PC and Golding, JP and Maynard, E and Alphey, L and Rojas, Alvarez DP and Coffey, LL and Faria, NR and Maciel-de-Freitas, R and Maringer, K and Murray, KA and Salje, H and Sang, R and Vasconcelos, PFC and Leo, Y-S and Sinkins, SP and de, Vasconcelos JN and Dadzie, SK and Harris, E and dos, Santos TH and Velayudhan, R and Wongsawat, J and Osterholm, MT and Lackritz, EM},
doi = {ofid/ofaf395},
journal = {Open Forum Infectious Diseases},
title = {Meeting report on an integrated research agenda for mosquito-borne arboviruses},
url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofaf395},
volume = {12},
year = {2025}
}

RIS format (EndNote, RefMan)

TY  - JOUR
AB - The emergence and re-emergence of mosquito-borne arbovirus (MBV) diseases pose a rapidly expanding global health threat fueled by the convergence of multiple ecologic, economic, and social factors, including climate change, land use, poverty, deficiencies of water storage and sanitation, and limitations of vector control programs. On December 6, 2023, the Wellcome Trust and the University of Minnesota's Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy held a meeting titled “An integrated approach to mosquito-borne arboviruses: a priority research agenda.” The meeting comprised presentations, panels, and facilitated discussions aimed at describing the state of the field, highlighting recent accomplishments, identifying novel strategies, and defining priority research goals and approaches for addressing MBV disease preparedness and response. This report summarizes meeting discussions in 3 key areas: the changing epidemiology of MBV disease, current and potential transmission- and disease-monitoring strategies, and evolutionary impacts on disease burden and transmission. It concludes with a list of priority strategies for research and investment in MBV disease prevention, preparedness, and control. To prepare for future epidemics of MBV diseases, research and policy will benefit from a multipathogen approach to MBVs. Building on existing knowledge and systems, these efforts must address social and ecological factors and connect with other global health agendas.
AU - Ulrich,AK
AU - Moua,NM
AU - Mack,A
AU - Imai-Eaton,N
AU - Staples,JE
AU - Mehr,AJ
AU - Ostrowsky,JT
AU - Leighton,T
AU - Cehovin,A
AU - Fay,PC
AU - Golding,JP
AU - Maynard,E
AU - Alphey,L
AU - Rojas,Alvarez DP
AU - Coffey,LL
AU - Faria,NR
AU - Maciel-de-Freitas,R
AU - Maringer,K
AU - Murray,KA
AU - Salje,H
AU - Sang,R
AU - Vasconcelos,PFC
AU - Leo,Y-S
AU - Sinkins,SP
AU - de,Vasconcelos JN
AU - Dadzie,SK
AU - Harris,E
AU - dos,Santos TH
AU - Velayudhan,R
AU - Wongsawat,J
AU - Osterholm,MT
AU - Lackritz,EM
DO - ofid/ofaf395
PY - 2025///
SN - 2328-8957
TI - Meeting report on an integrated research agenda for mosquito-borne arboviruses
T2 - Open Forum Infectious Diseases
UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofaf395
UR - https://doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofaf395
VL - 12
ER -

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