News Release

Umea University researchers help Europe fight spread of Zika virus

Peer-Reviewed Publication

Umea University

Interview with Joacim Rock Umea University, on Zika

video: Associate Professor Joacim Rocklöv, the Department of Public Health and Clinical Medicine at Umeå University in Sweden, in an interview about Zika and other virus from Umeå University on Vimeo. view more 

Credit: Credit: Mattias Pettersson and Hans Karlsson, Umeå University

Researchers at Umeå University in Sweden help assess the risk that Zika will spread to Europe by describing the transmission season, areas at risk and intervention strategies. By using previous knowledge on Dengue, they are now strategizing on how Zika can be controlled.

"From a European perspective, the best immediate response to Zika is to help prevent the spread of the virus where the outbreak takes place," says Joacim Rocklöv, epidemiologist at the Department of Public Health and Clinical medicine at Umeå University.

As Europe responds to the global threat of the Zika virus, a team of leading experts on Dengue and other mosquito-borne viruses are providing crucial expertise. Dengue and Zika viruses are carried by some of the same mosquito types and also share a number of characteristics in terms of how viral infections manifest. Therefore, what the scientific community already knows about Dengue will be key in efforts to understand and prevent the spread of Zika. In this effort, Umeå University's current leading role in the Dengue research is highly relevant. Umeå University researchers are in dialogue with the European Centre for Disease Prevention & Control (ECDC) to advice on the many knowledge gaps on Zika.

Umeå University has since 2011 hosted DengueTools, an EU funded research consortium, developing innovative interventions for predicting and fighting the mosquito transmitted virus. This international research effort, which includes 14 partners in 11 different countries, has resulted in a model research infrastructure that can now be applied to fight the Zika virus.

"We can now use the well-functioning infrastructure we have already built through the Dengue Tools consortium to fight the spread of Zika. And in this existing model, Brazil, which has been hit hard by Zika, is already a strong partner," says Joacim Rocklöv.

The World Health Organization announced on 1 February that the rapid spread of the Zika virus amounts a global health emergency, echoing a call by the EU to fund research on the topic. In addition to the Umeå researchers' role as expert consultants to the ECDC, the Umeå University researchers, led by Joacim Rocklöv and Professor Annelies Wilder-Smith, are answering this call and capitalizing on the existing partnerships, infrastructures, technologies and knowledge developed through DengueTools consortium to combat the ongoing Zika pandemic.

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Fresh video interview on Zika

Watch and download an interview with Associate Professor Joacim Rocklöv at the Department of Public Health and Clinical Medicine at Umeå University explaining the research on Zika:

Link to video interview: https://vimeo.com/154571562

Q&A 1 (00:00-00:36): What is most important now?

Q&A 2 (00:37-01:41): Why is this research of importance? What are the objectives?)

Q&A 3 (01:42-03:16): When does this project start?

Q&A 4 (03:17-03:51): Short background

Additional footage of surroundings for editing:

https://vimeo.com/154571561

All video footage is free to use, edit and share, please give credit to Umeå University. Photographer: Hans Karlsson, Umeå University.

High resolution portrait photos for download

https://mediabank.umu.se/share/fa3b1933abc64bc30e909fcdb50b2cc6 Photographer: Mattias Pettersson, Umeå University

Read more about the DengueTools consortium:

http://www.denguetools.net/


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