Skip to content

CLIMOS Training Material

CLIMOS project has the explicit role to help health authorities and policymakers to prevent the spread of climate-induced diseases between animals and humans using a ‘One Health’ approach, namely vector-borne and zoonotic pathogens. 

With these Policy Briefs, we would like to see actions taken in key priorities including expanding surveillance to non-endemic areas, integrating human–animal–vector–environmental data systems, and promoting mandatory national reporting to enhance preparedness and response. 

Tutorial: Dissection of a sand fly salivary glands

Tutorial: Dissection of a sand fly midgut

Strengthening Surveillance and Prevention of Sand Fly-Borne Diseases

CLIMOS Project Policy Brief for Early Detection & Risk Reduction

As climate change and environmental degradation reshape the risk landscape, Sand Fly-Borne Diseases (SFBDs), including Leishmaniasis and viruses such as Toscana (TOSV), are no longer restricted to southern latitudes. Recent evidence from our project indicates that climate suitability for sand fly vector species are is expected to increase in endemic regions including southwest Iberia, the south and southwest coasts of France, coastal regions in Italy and in the Balkans, and west and central Turkey, with emerging risks in previously unaffected regions including Austria, Germany and the Netherlands.