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Digital and technological innovation in vector-borne disease surveillance to predict, detect, and control climate-driven outbreaks

Caitlin Pley, Megan Evans, Rachel Lowe, Hugh Montgomery, Sophie Yacoub

2021The Lancet Planetary Health72 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Vector-borne diseases are particularly sensitive to changes in weather and climate. Timely warnings from surveillance systems can help to detect and control outbreaks of infectious disease, facilitate effective management of finite resources, and contribute to knowledge generation, response planning, and resource prioritisation in the long term, which can mitigate future outbreaks. Technological and digital innovations have enabled the incorporation of climatic data into surveillance systems, enhancing their capacity to predict trends in outbreak prevalence and location. Advance notice of the risk of an outbreak empowers decision makers and communities to scale up prevention and preparedness interventions and redirect resources for outbreak responses. In this Viewpoint, we outline important considerations in the advent of new technologies in disease surveillance, including the sustainability of innovation in the long term and the fundamental obligation to ensure that the communities that are affected by the disease are involved in the design of the technology and directly benefit from its application.

Topics & Concepts

OutbreakVector (molecular biology)Disease surveillanceControl (management)Disease controlVector controlDiseaseGeographyEnvironmental planningEnvironmental healthRisk analysis (engineering)BusinessVirologyComputer scienceMedicineBiologyArtificial intelligenceEngineeringPathologyElectrical engineeringGeneInduction motorRecombinant DNAVoltageBiochemistryClimate Change and Health ImpactsViral Infections and VectorsZoonotic diseases and public health
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