Chikungunya
As an emerging global health threat, the mosquito-borne chikungunya virus has spread throughout Africa, Asia, Oceania, the Americas, and Europe, affecting millions of people.
Our preparedness work
In early 2018, the GloPID-R Chikungunya (CHIKV), O’nyong-nyong (ONNV) and Mayaro virus (MAYV) Working Group was formed to identify knowledge gaps and to propose recommendations for research funders, direct future investigations and suggest rectification measures.
Working group
The working group brought together some 30 experts from across the globe. Their areas of focus included diagnostics, epidemiology, clinical treatment, monitoring and vector control.
A total of 22 organizations took part in the working group, which published its final reports in late 2019. Working group participants included:
Aix-Marseille university-IRD-INSERM-IHU (France)
Fiocruz (Brazil)
University of Glasgow (UK)
University of Pereira (Colombia)
Institut Pasteur of Dakar (Senegal)
Institut Pasteur of Paris (France)
Institut Pasteur of Guadeloupe
Institut Pasteur of Cambodia
Centre for infectious disease control (Rotterdam, the Netherlands)
Stanford University (USA)
French Military Medical Service (Marseille, France)
Blood Systems Research Institute (San Francisco, USA)
University of Berlin (Germany)
University of Leuven (Belgium)
A*STAR (Singapore)
Food and Drug Administration (Washington, D.C., USA)
Public Health Agency of Canada (Winnipeg, Canada)
Washington University (St. Louis, USA)
Blood Systems Research Institute (San Francisco, USA)
University of Texas Medical Branch (Galveston, USA)
Etablissement Français du Sang (Marseille, France)
Heidelberg University Hospital (Germany)
Reports
- GloPID-R report on Chikungunya, O’nyong nyong and Mayaro virus, part 1: Biological diagnostics
- GloPID-R report on Chikungunya, O’nyong nyong and Mayaro virus, part 2: Epidemiological distribution of O’nyong-nyongvirus
- GloPID-R report on Chikungunya, O’nyong nyong and Mayaro virus, part 3: Epidemiological distribution of Mayaro virus
- GloPID-R reports on Chikungunya, O’nyong-nyong and Mayaro virus, part 4: Entomological aspects
