Shlomit Paz’s research while affiliated with University of Haifa and other places

What is this page?


This page lists works of an author who doesn't have a ResearchGate profile or hasn't added the works to their profile yet. It is automatically generated from public (personal) data to further our legitimate goal of comprehensive and accurate scientific recordkeeping. If you are this author and want this page removed, please let us know.

Publications (2)


The potential of climatic suitability indicator for Leishmania transmission modelling in Europe: insights and suggested directions
  • Article
  • Full-text available

July 2024

·

31 Reads

·

2 Citations

The Lancet Regional Health - Europe

Shlomit Paz
Download

Climate change: A driver of increasing vector-borne disease transmission in non-endemic areas

April 2024

·

27 Reads

·

12 Citations

In this Perspective, Shlomit Paz discusses the link between climate change and transmission of vector-borne diseases in non-endemic areas.

Citations (2)


... Leishmania is a well-known unicellular parasite as the causative agent of a debilitating vector-borne disease with diverse manifestations from fatal visceral (VL) and mucocutaneous (MCL) forms to self-healing cutaneous forms (CL). There is an urgent need for protective vaccines and also drug candidates due to the changes in the map of endemicity and world-wide spread of the disease (Paz, 2024). However, failure in the deep understanding of real parasite-host-vector interaction has hampered the development of protective vaccines or effective treatments. ...

Reference:

Editorial: Latest findings on Leishmania parasites for better Vaccine Design and Drug Development
The potential of climatic suitability indicator for Leishmania transmission modelling in Europe: insights and suggested directions

The Lancet Regional Health - Europe

... These examples underscore the importance of comprehensive strategies that combine environmental management, entomological surveillance, and access to timely diagnostics to address the challenges posed by climate change in the global dynamics of vector-borne diseases [25]. ...

Climate change: A driver of increasing vector-borne disease transmission in non-endemic areas