Picture collage of the exhibition©BNITM
Event

World NTD Day 2026: Art, discussion and global health

Many neglected tropical diseases could be prevented or treated, yet they remain a reality for millions of people worldwide. To mark World NTD Day, BNITM invites you to an evening event in Hamburg’s Speicherstadt on 30 January 2026. A panel discussion with experts and an accompanying art exhibition will explore the causes, consequences and social perception of neglected tropical diseases.

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The photo shows several children sitting at tables in the course room and looking into microscopes.©BNITM
Event

Youth Future Day 🏳️‍🌈

What do researchers actually do all day? You are at least 11 years old and curious about science? Then join us for Youth Future Day on 12 March 2026 at BNITM!

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The photo shows the almost full lecture hall at the BNITM. A speaker stands at the lectern in te, and a slide from the presentation can be seen in the background.©BNITM | Dino Schachten
Lectures for laypeople

A year full of insights

Find out more about our public information events in 2025: Topics ranged from neglected tropical diseases and malaria to mosquito research and research on haemorrhagic fever viruses such as Ebola and Marburg. The presentations are now available on our YouTube channel.

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Group photo on an entrance staircase©BNITM
Funding

Greater safety through knowledge transfer

BNITM received approximately €1.2 million in funding from the Federal Foreign Office for international biosafety projects in Moldova, Ukraine and the Western Balkans. In close collaboration with local partners, the institute improved diagnostic methods, conducted seroprevalence studies and strengthened protection against the misuse of dangerous pathogens.

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Graphic: Model of balancing selection between the malaria parasite and the host, driving selection for autoimmune traits.©Hopp
Research funding

ERC grant for malaria and autoimmune research

Dr Christine Hopp, junior research group leader at BNITM, receives an ERC Consolidator Grant for her AUTOIMMPRINT project. Her hypothesis: mild autoimmunity appears to have a natural protective function against malaria. The aim is to gain a more detailed understanding of this relationship at the molecular and cellular level – for more effective vaccines and new therapies. The research is being conducted at BNITM and in Mali and Ghana.

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Graphic on the Stages of the Map-Xing study©Samuel Pazicky et al., published in Nature Microbiology
Publication

Fundamental research into malaria

The proteome-wide profiling method MAP-X shows in unprecedented detail how proteins of the malaria parasite interact at different stages of development. The technology combines thermal proteome profiling with machine learning and reveals previously unknown complexes. This creates new insights into key biological processes and provides starting points for future therapies – even beyond malaria.

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News

Group photo with BNITM employees in the garden
Announcements

The city and the world visited the Hamburg Tropical Institute

125 years of global infection research in the heart of Hamburg. The anniversary year of the Bernhard Nocht Institute for Tropical Medicine…

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[Translate to English:] Das Foto zeigt den historischen Hörsaal des BNITM. Auf den roten Stühlen sitzen Besucher:innen.
Announcements

First-hand knowledge: Review of the BNITM's public information events

In 2025, the BNITM once again opened its doors to anyone interested in global health and infection research. The four public information…

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Events

Public Events
30.01.2026

World NTD Day 2026

Skin ulcers, because you have to wash your hands in puddles. Heart failure, because triatomine bugs live in your hut and bite you at…

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Public Events, Professional Events
31.01.2026

Tag der Reisegesundheit

Nicht verpassen! Ein Veranstaltungsmuss in Ihrem Kalender!

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Bernhard Nocht Institute for Tropical Medicine
Bernhard-Nocht-Straße 74
D-20359 Hamburg

Tel.: +49 40 285380-0
(Switchboard of the Institute)

E-Mail: bni@bnitm.de

Tel.: +49 40 285380-219
(for patients)

E-Mail: bni-ambulanz@uke.de

 

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