The University of Pretoria (UP) and the Department of Public and Ecosystem Health at the Cornell University College of Veterinary Medicine are doing research on how climate change affects infectious diseases.
The have received a grant from the USA’s National Institutes of Health to establish the Center for Transformative Infectious Disease Research on Climate, Health, and Equity in a Changing Environment (C-Change).
Climate change is accelerating the spread of diseases transmitted by mosquitoes and ticks, as well as increasing the risk of zoonotic viruses spilling over from animals to humans.
C-Change aims to address these challenges, offering new solutions to the ways climate change is directly impacting global human health. The centre’s research will involve collaboration between faculty and students from both UP and Cornell.
“The collaboration between the University of Pretoria and Cornell University marks a significant step forward in addressing the complex intersection of climate change, public health, and infectious diseases,” said Professor Sunil Maharaj, Vice-Principal for Research, Innovation and Postgraduate Education at UP.
He explained that by uniting experts across disciplines and working alongside vulnerable communities, this research will not only enhance their ability to predict and prevent disease outbreaks, but also foster innovation in sustainable health solutions for both South Africa and the global community.
Dr Alexander Travis, Director of Cornell Public Health, said: “To have the greatest health impacts, we must pivot from reactively responding to outbreaks to proactively understanding the social and environmental conditions that increase the risk of outbreaks.
If we can understand the conditions that allow diseases to emerge or spread, then we can predict when they will happen and work to prevent them, which is our ultimate goal.”
Travis is also the founding chair of the Department of Public and Ecosystem Health, and multi-PI of the centre, along with Dr Marinda Oosthuizen, Professor and Deputy Dean of Research and Postgraduate Studies at UP’s Faculty of Veterinary Science.
“Preventing the outbreak of disease before it occurs is the best way to protect the public’s health,” Travis said.
The centre’s faculty and trainees will partner with rural communities – primarily in South Africa and New York State – who are most vulnerable to these changes, to collect and integrate diverse data on climate, land use, human and animal health, disease vectors and the pathogens themselves.
These teams will create predictive epidemiological models that can both help communities prepare and form the basis of practical, preventative interventions.
This approach solves a long-standing challenge in the field. “Traditionally, academics working in different disciplines, such as the interface of climate change and infectious disease, have had minimal ability to understand or take advantage of each other’s approaches and data.
External partners in government and communities typically find these results both inaccessible and unhelpful,” Travis said.
He added that C-Change has assembled a transdisciplinary team to break down those siloes between disciplines, and between academics and their community partners.
The first major research project will focus on viral pathogen spillover and will be led by several of the experts. They will investigate how climate extremes and land use changes result in wildlife stress, increasing both viral shedding and interaction with humans, facilitating viral spillover events.
In the second major research project, experts will explore animal and human health, ecological and genomic data on tick- and mosquito-borne diseases in the context of climate change.
This knowledge will be used to create community-based early warning systems for when to expect increased risk that these vectors will be active and carry and transmit the pathogens. Communities and healthcare systems can then try to prevent and prepare for the diseases they carry.
The teams will ensure that all data generated is accessible across disciplines to all C-Change researchers and partners. These researchers will also provide training on how to integrate diverse data such as temperature, precipitation, pathogen and vector genomics, human movement and vector life cycles.
It is said that the work of the community engagement core is equally critical to the centre’s success. Led by UP’s Dr Ilana Van Wyk, and Cornell’s Dr Gen Meredith, Associate Director of Cornell Public Health and head of its Health Impacts Core, this core will work in rural communities in South Africa, Zimbabwe and New York State.
They will ensure that the researchers partner with the most vulnerable communities from the initial stages of research design to the production and communication of results that are useful to those communities.
“Whether in Africa or North America, rural communities often bear the greatest infectious disease burdens from climate change. The research will help us understand how climate change is increasingly putting people at risk, so we can try to prevent it,” Oosthuizen said.
She stressed that this is not just about managing disease – it’s about creating resilience in a changing climate.
Pretoria News