UKRI & Defra, 2023
One Health Vector-Borne Diseases Hub (also called “VBD Hub” or “One Health VBD Hub”) is a non-profit open-source project funded by UKRI and Defra. The aim of the project is to improve the accessibility and sharing of information about the infectious agents, hosts, and vectors involved in vector-borne disease transmission in the UK. To accomplish this the project will:
- Build new infrastructure that allows researchers working across different vector and pathogen species and ecological, veterinary, and medical contexts to combine their knowledge to deliver more coordinated responses to vector-borne disease threats
- Develop new tools to help understand the relationship between our environment and vector-borne disease transmission and predict how changes in the environment will impact risk going forward
- Support the sharing of data and findings on these diseases among the UK research community and with policymakers.
In the end, the project will deliver a platform and network for dealing with UK vector-disease threats.
Vector-borne diseases (VBDs), in which infection is spread by insects, ticks, and mites, affect the health of humans, animals, and plants. They include diseases which may sound familiar like Lyme disease, Bluetongue, and Louping Ill, and new infections like Usutu virus.
Over the next 20 years, risk of these types of infections in the UK is predicted to increase.
It is critical that we establish the key networks and platforms needed to coordinate the UK’s response to these looming threats. Formulating plans to prevent and control vector-borne diseases is complicated by the fact that their transmission cycles often involve not only vectors but also several domestic and wildlife animal species and are extremely dependent on environmental conditions.