Climate change and health in Southeast Asia – defining research priorities and the role of the Wellcome Trust Africa Asia Programmes

MarcChoisy; Angela McBride ORCID logo; Mary Chambers ORCID logo; Chanh Ho Quang ORCID logo; HuyNguyen Quang; Nguyen ThiXuan Chau; Giang NguyenThi; Ana Bonell ORCID logo; MeganEvans; Damien Ming ORCID logo; +17 more... Thanh Ngo-Duc ORCID logo; PhamQuang Thai; Duy HoangDang Giang; Ho NgocDan Thanh; HoangNgoc Nhung; Rachel Lowe ORCID logo; Richard Maude ORCID logo; IqbalElyazar; Henry Surendra ORCID logo; Elizabeth A Ashley ORCID logo; Louise Thwaites ORCID logo; H Rogier van Doorn ORCID logo; Evelyne Kestelyn ORCID logo; Arjen M Dondorp ORCID logo; Guy Thwaites ORCID logo; Nguyen Van Vinh Chau ORCID logo; SophieYacoub; (2021) Climate change and health in Southeast Asia – defining research priorities and the role of the Wellcome Trust Africa Asia Programmes. Wellcome Open Research, 6. p. 278. DOI: 10.12688/wellcomeopenres.17263.1
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<ns4:p>This article summarises a recent virtual meeting organised by the Oxford University Clinical Research Unit in Vietnam on the topic of climate change and health, bringing local partners, faculty and external collaborators together from across the Wellcome and Oxford networks. Attendees included invited local and global climate scientists, clinicians, modelers, epidemiologists and community engagement practitioners, with a view to setting priorities, identifying synergies and fostering collaborations to help define the regional climate and health research agenda. In this summary paper, we outline the major themes and topics that were identified and what will be needed to take forward this research for the next decade. We aim to take a broad, collaborative approach to including climate science in our current portfolio where it touches on infectious diseases now, and more broadly in our future research directions. We will focus on strengthening our research portfolio on climate-sensitive diseases, and supplement this with high quality data obtained from internal studies and external collaborations, obtained by multiple methods, ranging from traditional epidemiology to innovative technology and artificial intelligence and community-led research. Through timely agenda setting and involvement of local stakeholders, we aim to help support and shape research into global heating and health in the region.</ns4:p>



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