Looping: How poverty and vector-borne diseases fuel each other
Poverty, inequality, and vector-borne disease feed into one another. How do we break the loop?
Poverty, inequality, and vector-borne disease feed into one another. How do we break the loop?
In today's economic climate there is an urgent need for economic tools and methodologies to adequately evaluate and demonstrate to national… Read more »
October 1st, 2019 marked the 70th anniversary of the founding of the People’s Republic of China. In an article recently… Read more »
On the northern shores of Lake Victoria, Uganda, communities are blighted by schistosomiasis despite 10 years of on-going… Read more »
Infectious Diseases of Poverty has published an article investigating the risk of malaria on the China-Myanmar border and how this… Read more »
Publishing today in Infectious Diseases of Poverty and just in time for World Tuberculosis Day, researchers investigate the… Read more »
The Editor-in-Chief of Infectious Diseases of Poverty explains more about an Editorial recently published on the significance of… Read more »
Smoking is not only bad for your health but could be the cause of families’ financial hardship. Assistant Professor, Tessa… Read more »