Our group works on health projects all over the world in partnership with government stakeholders and non-government organizations.

Animal Feces Exposure

We are working to explore the potential human health risks of exposure to animal feces in low-income settings.

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CARE-Emory Collaboration

The vision of the CARE-Emory Collaboration is to jointly produce high-impact, policy-and programmatically-relevant applied research and learning to address global challenges to human development for transformative impact at scale.

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CARE-Emory Implementation Science Research

This collaboration aims to enhance program impact and improve the state of the knowledge for implementation science and research in the fields of gender equity, economic empowerment, WASH, and nutrition.

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Cheepcheep ii

We are developing and testing an intervention for open-air markets in low-to-middle income countries to reduce risk related to contamination of poultry products.

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Hand hygiene systematic reviews

We are conducting a series of systematic reviews on hand hygiene in community settings to support guideline development by the WHO.

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NEISE

NEISE is a network that encourages interdisciplinary research opportunities to harness the intellectual resources of Emory University and Greater Atlanta.

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PAASIM Study

We are evaluating if and how improvements in water supply in urban areas of Mozambique reduce or delay enteric pathogen infection, alter gut microbiome composition, and affect enteric dysfunction and other health outcomes in infants.

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qPhat

Using color theory principles, we are developing and testing a novel metric that generates quantitative measures of facial and hand cleanliness, proxy indicators of personal hygiene practices - known as the “Quantitative Personal Hygiene Assessment Tool (qPHAT)”

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SWIFT II

SWIFT II is a continuation of the first trial (WUHA I). WUHA I is an ongoing cluster-randomized trial in rural Ethiopia designed to determine the effectiveness of water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) for trachoma.

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WASH Modeling

In collaboration with researchers from the School of Public Health at the University of Michigan we aim to develop a transmission modeling framework to support evidence-based context-specific WASH intervention planning.

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WASH Reporting

We aim to develop and operationalize a gold-standard, easily adoptable approach for how researchers, policymakers, and practitioners report the implementation and context of hygiene and WASH interventions.

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