Hantavirus in Africa : why climate change, rats and weak surveillance are worrying scientists
18 mai 2026 | Wolfgang Preiser, Head: Division of Medical Virology, Stellenbosch University, Carla Mavian, Assistant Professor, University of Florida, Cheryl Baxter, Head Scientific Research Support, Stellenbosch University, Richard Lessells, Senior Lecturer, University of KwaZulu-Natal, Tulio de Oliveira, Director of the Centre for Epidemic Response and Innovation (CERI) at Stellenbosch University and the KwaZulu-Natal Research Innovation and Sequencing Plaform (KRISP)., Stellenbosch University
Weak surveillance and climate change could allow deadly hantaviruses to spread unnoticed across African countries, raising the risk of future outbreaks.
Site référencé: The Conversation (Africa)
The Conversation (Africa)
Les survivants d'Ebola peinent à retrouver une vie normale : ce que j'ai découvert en Sierra Leone et au Libéria
19/05/2026
Gut health : why food alone won’t fix childhood stunting
19/05/2026
Animaux sacrés et royaux du Cameroun : la littérature et la prospective peuvent-elles les sauver ?
19/05/2026
Mali’s military leader is consolidating power. Why this is dangerous
18/05/2026
80 % des engrais utilisés en Afrique sont importés : comment les systèmes alimentaires peuvent s'adapter au choc iranien
18/05/2026
Ebola survivors struggle to return to normal lives : what I found out in Sierra Leone and Liberia
18/05/2026