Living Laboratory to operationalize One Health Surveillance of climate related emerging zoonoses

Background: The climate change impacts health and some climate sensitive infectious diseases are indicators that must be actively monitored. The Emilia-Romagna region (northeastern Italy) has adopted a one-health approach to the surveillance of some vector- diseases (VBDs) that became endemic or re-...

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Main Authors: Prof Alessandra Scagliarini, Alessandra Mistral De Pascali, Martina Brandolini, Ludovica Ingletto, Arianna Succi, Mattia Calzolari, Valeria Frassineti, Giulia Silvestrini, Raffaella Angelini, Marco Fabbri, Irene Zaghi, Giorgio Dirani, Silvia Zannoli, Massimiliano Guerra, Francesca Taddei, Laura Dionisi, Giulia Gatti, Claudia Colosimo, Carlo Biagetti, Francesco Cristini, Paolo Bassi, Monica Cricca, Vittorio Sambri
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2025-03-01
Series:International Journal of Infectious Diseases
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1201971224004508
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Summary:Background: The climate change impacts health and some climate sensitive infectious diseases are indicators that must be actively monitored. The Emilia-Romagna region (northeastern Italy) has adopted a one-health approach to the surveillance of some vector- diseases (VBDs) that became endemic or re-emerged (West Nile and leishmaniasis). Over the last two years, the region witnessed extreme weather events that unveiled the environmental vulnerability of its eastern part (Romagna). In 2023-24, massive floodings affected a territory being characterized by national parks, wetlands and semi-extensive agriculture and animal productions, with major consequences on the health and welfare of people and animals. Several research and diagnostic centers are active in the field of human, animal and environmental health making it an ideal context to operationalize one health surveillance. Methods: A multistakeholder network was established to integrate clinical and laboratory diagnosis, vector and animal monitoring, epidemiological and genomic surveillance to allow early detection and characterisation of emerging and re-emerging zoonotic agents. Febrile neurologic surveillance has been put in place to investigate the contribute of ecological and climate trends on these disorders in the Romagna hot spot. The adopted transdisciplinary approach is aimed at designing proper science-based preventive strategies and policies. Results and Discussion: More than 3000 cases of febrile neurologic syndromes were identified over the last 7 years (2017-2023) in Romagna, half of them were classified as Fever of Unknown Origin (FUO), at the time of hospital discharge, with higher incidence during summer months. Major FUO clusters were found in the areas of higher insect abundance, suggesting a possible role of vectorborne infectious agents, not yet included in the official surveillance and diagnostic panels. The integrated One Health genomic surveillance, of West Nile virus (WNV), showed the importance of continuous virus tracking and the value of studying viral genetic diversity to mitigate the impact of this VBD on public health. Moreover, the active WNV surveillance led to identify least-known arboviruses such as Tahyna virus an orthobunyavirus causing undifferentiated fever and influenza-like symptoms, with or without central nervous system involvement that may play a role in some of the identified FUOs. The integrated Leishmania surveillance allowed the identification of several phlebovirus species including neurotropic Toscana virus and other sandfly-transmitted viruses that have not yet been associated with animal and human diseases. Conclusions: For its peculiar geo-ecological characteristics and its vulnerability to extreme climatic events, Romagna is particularly prone to climate sensitive vector and waterborne zoonoses. This ecological, productive, social, and scientific context makes it an ideal living laboratory in which to implement a one-health approach to bridge gaps in surveillance, deepen the epidemiology and guide effective public health responses to emerging climate related health threats, finally showing the value of transdisciplinary collaborations and active stakeholders’ engagement.
ISSN:1201-9712