A Mosquito Emoji for Public Health Takes Flight

The mosquito emoji, proposed by CCP and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and approved by the Unicode Consortium, is coming to your smartphone this summer.
moquito proposed as a new emoji
Credit: Aphelandra Messer

The mosquito emoji is coming to your smartphone this fall.

The Unicode Consortium, the nonprofit governing body responsible for determining which emoji are added each year, announced in a blog post Wednesday that it had approved 157 new characters for release in June 2018. The new emoji are expected to start showing up on mobile devices later this year.

The mosquito emoji was proposed last year by the Johns Hopkins Center for Communication Programs and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. The idea was to make it easier for people to communicate about the public health hazards of the most dangerous animal on Earth. Because mosquitoes spread diseases like malaria, Zika, dengue and yellow fever, they contribute to several million deaths and hundreds of millions of illnesses every year.

A mosquito emoji will give health professionals a quick way to communicate with the public about the presence of mosquitoes, and allow researchers to promote their work around mosquito-borne diseases more easily via social media.

There are already emoji for ants, spiders and ladybugs, honeybees, turtles and snails. There are emoji for dozens of facial expressions and, of course, even a poop emoji. Marla Shaivitz, the digital communications manager at CCP who proposed the emoji along with Jeff Chertak, a senior program officer for malaria advocacy and communications Gates Foundation, said was really surprised there wasn’t a mosquito emoji already.

“From the initial research into demand for the emoji, I knew there would be a lot of interest in having a mosquito available for people to use as part of their daily digital communication,” Shaivitz says. “But even I have been taken aback at the high level of interest and support it has received online from individuals, the media and large organizations such as The Global Fund and UNICEF.”

Shaivitz says she even heard from the curator of digital design at the Victoria and Albert Museum in London, who expressed interest in adding the emoji to its permanent collection.

Among the other new emoji approved this week: a female superhero, a lobster, a hot face and a softball.

The mosquito emoji proposal can be found here.

 

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