Why the growth of arboviral diseases necessitates a new generation of global risk maps and future projections

Oliver J Brady ORCID logo ; Leonardo S Bastos ; Jamie M Caldwell ; Simon Cauchemez ; Hannah E Clapham ; Illaria Dorigatti ; Katy AM Gaythorpe ; Wenbiao Hu ; Laith Hussain-Alkhateeb ; Michael A Johansson ; +13 more... Ahyoung Lim ORCID logo ; Velma K Lopez ; Richard James Maude ORCID logo ; Jane P Messina ; Erin A Mordecai ; Andrew Townsend Peterson ORCID logo ; Isabel Rodriquez-Barraquer ; Ingrid B Rabe ; Diana P Rojas ; Sadie J Ryan ORCID logo ; Henrik Salje ; Jan C Semenza ; Quan Minh Tran ; (2025) Why the growth of arboviral diseases necessitates a new generation of global risk maps and future projections. PLoS computational biology, 21 (4). e1012771-e1012771. ISSN 1553-734X DOI: 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1012771
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Global risk maps are an important tool for assessing the global threat of mosquito and tick-transmitted arboviral diseases. Public health officials increasingly rely on risk maps to understand the drivers of transmission, forecast spread, identify gaps in surveillance, estimate disease burden, and target and evaluate the impact of interventions. Here, we describe how current approaches to mapping arboviral diseases have become unnecessarily siloed, ignoring the strengths and weaknesses of different data types and methods. This places limits on data and model output comparability, uncertainty estimation and generalisation that limit the answers they can provide to some of the most pressing questions in arbovirus control. We argue for a new generation of risk mapping models that jointly infer risk from multiple data types. We outline how this can be achieved conceptually and show how this new framework creates opportunities to better integrate epidemiological understanding and uncertainty quantification. We advocate for more co-development of risk maps among modellers and end-users to better enable risk maps to inform public health decisions. Prospective validation of risk maps for specific applications can inform further targeted data collection and subsequent model refinement in an iterative manner. If the expanding use of arbovirus risk maps for control is to continue, methods must develop and adapt to changing questions, interventions and data availability.


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