Christine Kreuder Johnson

Christine Kreuder Johnson

Position Title
VMD, MPVM, PhD
One Health Institute, School of Veterinary Medicine

Bio

Christine Kreuder Johnson is Professor of Epidemiology and Ecosystem Health and Director of the EpiCenter for Disease Dynamics at the One Health Institute. Her work is committed to transdisciplinary research to characterize impacts of environmental change on animal and human health, inform preparedness for emerging threats, and guide public policy at the intersection of emerging disease and environmental health. Professor Johnson’s research has pioneered new approaches to characterization of emerging threats and disease dynamics at the animal-human interface in rapidly changing landscapes that constitute “fault lines” for disease emergence, disease spillover and subsequent spread. This work involves surveillance in wildlife and people with acute febrile illness in close contact with wildlife that are potential reservoirs for infectious disease. Her activities serve pressing research needs at the boundaries of science and policy, such as investigations into early indicators of unusual morbidity and mortality in wildlife, impacts of land use and climate change on disease in populations, and conservation and public health implications of harmful algal blooms and land-to-sea movement of pathogens in coastal systems. To advance an understanding of environment and climate-related drivers for spillover and spread of ebolaviruses, coronaviruses, and arboviruses at the forest-urban ecosystem edge in Africa and Latin America, she leads the “EpiCenter for Emerging Infectious Disease Intelligence”, one of NIAID’s Centers for Emerging Infectious Disease (CREID). She also designed new approaches to animal and human surveillance in 30 resource-limited countries for USAID’s Emerging Pandemic Threats PREDICT program in partnership with public health, agricultural, and environmental government partners to inform on public health risk. Her most rewarding professional experiences have been to support science-based decision making and public policy by providing epidemiologic support, congressional briefings, and invited testimony to state and federal governments and intergovernmental international partners. At UC Davis, she teaches One Health and ecosystem health and fosters a training program in applied research in wildlife epidemiology and disease ecology at the animal-human interface.