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Climate & Enteric Infectious Disease (EID) Risk and Vulnerability

Climate & Enteric Infectious Disease (EID) Risk and Vulnerability

Climate & Enteric Infectious Disease Risk

The Climate and Enteric Diseases project is aimed at using geospatial modeling for predicting enteric infectious disease risk in changing climates. 

In this project, an interdisciplinary team, including epidemiologists, climatologists, bioinformaticians, and hydrologists, will expand the Planetary Child Health and Enterics Observatory (Plan-EO), an initiative which seeks to provide an evidence base for geographically targeted interventions, such as vaccines, against enteric infectious diseases (EIDs). Using a big data approach and advanced geostatistical analyses with global Earth Observation climate datasets, the team aims to produce generalizable estimates of the geographical distribution of EIDs and their associations with environmental drivers. The project involves developing an interactive online dashboard for result dissemination and convening an international research consortium.  

The Postdoctoral Research Associate contributes to understanding the impact of hydrometeorological and ecological factors on distinct pathways of EID transmission in the context of increasing childhood illness in low- and middle-income countries due to climate change. 

Project Team

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Josh Colston
Josh
Colston
Research Assistant Professor of Medicine
University of Virginia
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Andy
Margaret
Kosek
Professor of Medicine
University of Virginia
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Venkataraman Lakshmi
Venkataraman
Lakshmi
Professor of Engineering
University of Virginia
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Samarth Swarup
Samarth
Swarup
Research Associate Professor
University of Virginia
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Nasif headshot
Md Nasif
Hossain
Postdoctoral Research Associate
University of Virginia
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