The changing epidemiology of human leishmaniasis in the non-endemic country of Austria between 2000 to 2021, including a congenital case.
Katharina RiebenbauerStefan CzernyMaximilian EggNikolaus UrbanTamar KinaciyanAmélie HampelLuise FidelsbergerFranz KarlhoferStefanie PorkertJulia WalochnikAlessandra HandisuryaPublished in: PLoS neglected tropical diseases (2024)
The incidence of leishmaniasis has risen in the recent years. The numbers are anticipated to keep rising due to increasing human mobility, including travel and forced migration, growing reservoir host populations as well as expansion and dispersal of vector species caused by climate and habitat changes, urbanization and globalization. Hence, elevated awareness for the disease, including possible transmission in previously non-endemic regions and non-vector transmission modes, support of sandfly surveillance efforts and implementation and establishment of public health interventions in a One Health approach are pivotal in the global efforts to control and reduce leishmaniasis.