Periodic Reporting for period 1 - FascioClim (Impact of climate change on zoonotic vector-borne diseases and their potential transmission increase and introduction risk: An innovative approach with a selected disease model)
Período documentado: 2022-11-01 hasta 2025-08-31
FascioClim was not conceived as a stand-alone research proposal, but as the beginning of an entire research line aiming to assess the response of zoonotic VBDs to climate change and the potential threat it entails to Europe by using fascioliasis as a selected model. Fascioliasis, a complex zoonotic snail-borne disease, represents an ideal model as it has a low reservoir specificity, a high number of snail host species, and has already evinced being influenced by climate and global changes. We propose an integrative modeling framework for fascioliasis transmission: we will apply some innovative ideas in the field of ecological niche modeling combined with the use of climatic forecast indices, to identify the overlap between niches of fasciolids and snail hosts, and determine the area under risk of transmission. In addition, we will provide open-source tools accessible to the health sector. We expect this innovative ensemble of modeling approaches could be applied for assessing climate change impact on other zoonotic VBDs (in particular schistosomiasis, other snail-borne disease, but also mosquito- and tick-borne diseases, such as West Nile fever, Dengue, Zika, and Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever), in order to provide tools to guide interventions aimed to reduce and/or mitigate the disease burden in Europe. A parallel goal of this MSCA Individual Fellowship has been to foster the development of the individual researcher (that’s me!) in order to accomplish a more permanent integration in the European Research Area by consolidating a teaching/research position at a leading Spanish institution.
This MSCA allowed the Fellow to foster a number of valuable transferable skills related to research management and funding, science communication and teaching. His involvement in teaching activities at various levels, through workshops and formal classes to undergraduate and postgraduate students, provided him with the opportunity to share his knowledge and experience and, hopefully, to spark interest and curiosity among the participants about the subject and in pursuing a research path. During the grant, the Fellow obtained the Master's Degree in Tropical Parasitic Diseases (Faculty of Pharmacy and Food Sciences, UVEG), is about to present a second doctoral thesis (UVEG's PhD in Human and Animal Parasitology) and has secured a “Ramón y Cajal” fellowship (Spanish Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities), which represents a 5-year contract as consolidated researcher, followed by the stabilization in a permanent position in the host institution (in this case, the UVEG). Moreover, he obtained the C1 level certificate of Valencian/Catalan language, as it is mandatory to consolidate a teaching/research position in a university of the Valencian Community.
The impacts anticipated from the MSCA are expected to be increased and improved, as a number of scientific publications are still under development. Furthermore, FascioClim has been the starting point of an independent research line boosted by this MSCA fellowship, which will be continued by the Fellow during the following years through the implementation of the prestigious "Ramón y Cajal" grant he has recently secured.