The increasing threat of Rift Valley fever virus globalization: strategic guidance for protection and preparation

Author:

Gibson Seth1ORCID,Noronha Leela E2,Tubbs Heidi3,Cohnstaedt Lee W2ORCID,Wilson William C2ORCID,Mire Chad2ORCID,Mitzel Dana2,Anyamba Assaf3,Rostal Melinda4,Linthicum Kenneth J1

Affiliation:

1. USDA Agricultural Research Service Center for Medical, Agricultural, and Veterinary Entomology – Mosquito and Fly Research Unit , Gainesville, FL , USA

2. The National Bio- and Agro-Defense Facility, USDA Agricultural Research Service, Foreign Arthropod Borne Animal Diseases Research Unit , Manhattan, KS , USA

3. Geospatial Science and Human Security Division, National Security Sciences Directorate, Oak Ridge National Laboratory , Oak Ridge, TN , USA

4. EcoHealth Alliance , New York, NY , USA

Abstract

Abstract Rift Valley fever virus (RVFV) (Bunyavirales: Phlebovirus) is a prominent vector-borne zoonotic disease threat to global agriculture and public health. Risks of introduction into nonendemic regions are tied to changing climate regimes and other dynamic environmental factors that are becoming more prevalent, as well as virus evolutionary factors and human/animal movement. Endemic to the African continent, RVFV has caused large epizootics at the decadal scale since the early 20th century but has spread to the Arabian Peninsula and shows increasing patterns of interepizootic transmission on the annual scale. This virus can be transmitted by mosquitoes as well as through direct contact with infected tissues and can cause sporadic to widespread morbidity and mortality in domestic ungulate livestock as well as humans. High viremias in infected livestock moved for legal and illegal trade as well as in infected mosquitoes or human travelers can spread this virus worldwide. With increasing global commerce, it is likely RVFV will be introduced to new areas with suitable hosts, mosquito vector species, and environments. However, the strong mosquito component of RVFV epidemiology combined with advancements in vaccines, diagnostics, and virus evolutionary factors create opportunities for strategies to leverage models of connectivity among potential source and emerging regions to target surveillance and mitigation activities to reduce the risk of RVFV introduction, or contain the virus should it be introduced, into new regions.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Insect Science,General Veterinary,Parasitology

Reference127 articles.

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