DOI: 10.3390/tropicalmed11070182 ISSN: 2414-6366

Climate Change and Autochthonous Vector-Borne Disease Transmission in Europe: Dengue as a Sentinel Signal for Surveillance and Preparedness

Maciej Grzybek, Anna Bogacka

Climate change is reshaping the epidemiology of vector-borne diseases in Europe by altering the ecological conditions that determine vector survival, seasonal activity and pathogen transmission. Rising temperatures, milder winters, prolonged warm seasons and changing precipitation patterns are increasing the suitability of parts of Europe for competent mosquito, tick and sandfly vectors. These changes, combined with human mobility and land-use change, increase the probability that imported pathogens encounter permissive conditions for local transmission. This Opinion article examines autochthonous vector-borne disease transmission in Europe, using dengue as a sentinel example of a wider climate-sensitive transition. We discuss how imported viraemic cases, established competent vectors, vector–host contact and delayed clinical recognition can converge to enable local outbreaks. Beyond dengue, we consider West Nile virus, chikungunya, tick-borne encephalitis, leishmaniasis and Crimean–Congo haemorrhagic fever as examples of a broader and increasingly heterogeneous European risk landscape. We argue that the public-health impact of this transition is shaped not only by vector expansion, but also by gaps in surveillance integration, diagnostic readiness, workforce preparedness and One Health coordination. Strengthening climate-informed surveillance, rapid laboratory capacity, frontline clinical awareness and cross-sectoral response systems will be essential to prevent repeated introductions from becoming sustained public-health challenges.

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