Status: in progress - level 1
Last updated on 24 November 2025
RVF mainly affects ruminants (sheep, cattle, goats), with transmission to humans mainly through direct contact with the blood, fluids or tissues of infected animals (slaughter, cutting, plucking, ingestion of undercooked meat or raw milk).
Transmission by mosquito bites (Aedes, Culex, including C. pipiens and A. albopictus) also contributes to viral circulation (2,3). No human-to-human transmission has yet been documented (4)
As part of Level 1 of the Emergence Unit, the agency has undertaken several actions:
The ANRS MIE compiles and publishes online a monthly review of scientific literature and news.
The scientific review, which is available for download, includes:
On 7 November 2025, ANRS MIE organised a research meeting on Rift Valley fever, in conjunction with the Arbo-France network and ANRS MIE’s coordinated action on viral haemorrhagic fevers.
On the agenda:
The minutes and some of the presentations are available for download below:
As of 27 October, Senegal had reported 2,266 cases (277 confirmed and 1,989 suspected) and 22 deaths, mainly in the Saint-Louis region (87% of confirmed cases). The disease is present in eight of its regions.
In Mauritania, the Ministry of Health reported 176 cases (42 confirmed and 134 suspected) and 14 deaths in 11 of the 15 regions (4).
A single case has just been reported in Uganda (5) for the very first time. This death does not appear to be linked to the current epidemic in West Africa.