Last updated on 14 November 2025
The Working Group on Infodemic and Epidemic Crises was established in September 2024, initially in response to the resurgence of the mpox epidemic in the DRC and neighbouring countries, with a view to broadening its scope to other epidemic crises.
Its objectives are:
The WG’s originality lies in particular in its diversity:
The first meetings of the WG, which aimed to share expertise in order to promote acculturation within the group, consisted of presentations of research work by experts from different disciplines. These presentations were followed by discussions that encouraged coordination of thinking on the infodemic and epidemic crises, with a view to designing an innovative and multidisciplinary research project.
These reflections led to the design of studies and the submission of research projects in response to calls for proposals from ANRS MIE
This socio-anthropological case study aims to explore how information about the human metapneumovirus (HMPV) respiratory virus is constructed and propagated within the digital public sphere in order to map the discourse and sources of influence of this information. This study was conducted in January and February 2025.
Further research opportunities are opening up for the Infodemic Working Group following the chikungunya vaccination campaign in Réunion, as well as within the framework of the 2025 call for projects from the PEPR MIE.
The WG brings together around thirty experts from a range of disciplines: anthropology, sociology, psychology, epidemiology, infectious diseases, information and communication sciences, data sciences, and communication.
These experts come from a variety of institutions: higher education establishments and scientific research organisations (EHESS, University of Zurich, UCAD, INSERM, Institut Pasteur, IRD, CNRS, etc.), hospitals, health agencies (WHO, Santé Publique France, Expertise France, etc.) and NGOs in France and in low- and middle-income countries.
The geographical diversity of the WG is also noteworthy, with members in Europe (France and Overseas France, Switzerland) and Africa (Burkina Faso, Senegal, DRC, Ivory Coast, Cameroon, Guinea).
These experts come from a variety of institutions: higher education establishments or scientific research organisations (EHESS, University of Zurich, UCAD, INSERM, Institut Pasteur, IRD, CNRS, etc.), hospitals, health agencies (WHO, Santé Publique France, Expertise France, etc.) and NGOs in France and in low- and middle-income countries.
The geographical diversity of the WG is also noteworthy, with members in Europe (France and overseas territories, Switzerland) and Africa (Burkina Faso, Senegal, DRC, Ivory Coast, Cameroon, Guinea).