Knowledge of how malaria infections spread locally is important both for the design of targeted interventions aiming to interrupt malaria transmission and the design of trials to assess the interventions. A previous analysis of 1602 genotyped Plasmodium falciparum parasites in Kilifi, Kenya collected over 12 years found an interaction between time and geographic distance: the mean number of single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) differences was lower for pairs of infections which were both a shorter time interval and shorter geographic distance apart. We determine whether the empiric pattern could be reproduced by a simple model, and what mean geographic distances between parent and offspring infections and hypotheses about genotype-specific ...
Human travel to malaria endemic lowlands from epidemic highlands has been shown to increase the risk...
Human travel to malaria endemic lowlands from epidemic highlands has been shown to increase the risk...
BackgroundThe Kenyan highlands were malaria-free before the 1910s, but a series of malaria epidemics...
Knowledge of how malaria infections spread locally is important both for the design of targeted inte...
Knowledge of how malaria infections spread locally is important both for the design of targeted inte...
Knowledge of how malaria infections spread locally is important both for the design of targeted inte...
Knowledge of how malaria infections spread locally is important both for the design of targeted inte...
Contains fulltext : 177629.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Background: The...
Background: The first models of malaria transmission assumed a completely mixed and homogeneous popu...
Background: The first models of malaria transmission assumed a completely mixed and homogeneous popu...
Background: The first models of malaria transmission assumed a completely mixed and homogeneous popu...
Background: The first models of malaria transmission assumed a completely mixed and homogeneous popu...
Background The first models of malaria transmission assumed a completely mixed and homogeneous popul...
Background The first models of malaria transmission assumed a completely mixed and homogeneous popul...
Human travel to malaria endemic lowlands from epidemic highlands has been shown to increase the risk...
Human travel to malaria endemic lowlands from epidemic highlands has been shown to increase the risk...
Human travel to malaria endemic lowlands from epidemic highlands has been shown to increase the risk...
BackgroundThe Kenyan highlands were malaria-free before the 1910s, but a series of malaria epidemics...
Knowledge of how malaria infections spread locally is important both for the design of targeted inte...
Knowledge of how malaria infections spread locally is important both for the design of targeted inte...
Knowledge of how malaria infections spread locally is important both for the design of targeted inte...
Knowledge of how malaria infections spread locally is important both for the design of targeted inte...
Contains fulltext : 177629.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Background: The...
Background: The first models of malaria transmission assumed a completely mixed and homogeneous popu...
Background: The first models of malaria transmission assumed a completely mixed and homogeneous popu...
Background: The first models of malaria transmission assumed a completely mixed and homogeneous popu...
Background: The first models of malaria transmission assumed a completely mixed and homogeneous popu...
Background The first models of malaria transmission assumed a completely mixed and homogeneous popul...
Background The first models of malaria transmission assumed a completely mixed and homogeneous popul...
Human travel to malaria endemic lowlands from epidemic highlands has been shown to increase the risk...
Human travel to malaria endemic lowlands from epidemic highlands has been shown to increase the risk...
Human travel to malaria endemic lowlands from epidemic highlands has been shown to increase the risk...
BackgroundThe Kenyan highlands were malaria-free before the 1910s, but a series of malaria epidemics...