Project articles
Drs. Matthew Freeman and Robert Bednarczyk are leading a team of interdisciplinary scientists from Emory and Georgia Tech to find out why and how countries have been successful in vaccine coverage.
Karen Levy, PhD, MPH, and Matthew Freeman, PhD, MPH, have received a 3-year, $600,000 grant from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation for a project entitled Chicken Exposures and Enteric Pathogens in Children Exposed through Environmental Pathways (ChEEP ChEEP).
An interdisciplinary team led by Matthew Freeman, PhD, MPH, and Robert A. Bednarczyk, PhD—in coordination with partners at Georgia Tech— will spearhead the study to assess how and why several countries (including Nepal, Senegal, India, and others) succeeded in rapidly increasing vaccination coverage rates and sustaining high coverage rates long term.
Our research group along with other researchers at the Emory Rollins School of Public Health have received a $3.7 million R01 grant from the National Institutes of Health to study the impact of a five-year, $140 million World Bank-funded water improvement project in Mozambique.
Findings from the Orissa Sanitation Trial highlighted in BBC News
Matt discusses the group’s WASH and NTD collaborative work in SciDevNet
Drs. Karen Levy and Matthew Freeman are examining the link between poultry production and enteric diseases in children under age 5 in low-income countries.