
Zach Popkin-Hall
@zachpopkinhall
Postdoctoral Research Associate @IDEELlabs studying non-falciparum malarias.
PhD in Entomology @TAMU on Anopheles gambiae genetics and behavior. @Macalester '13
ID: 1097303625221709825
https://www.med.unc.edu/medicine/infdis/ideel/directory/zach-popkin-hall/ 18-02-2019 01:15:45
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Here is the other piece of our (IDEEL MSMT Deus Ishengoma Jeff Bailey) work in Tanzania from 2021, a characterization of malaria species prevalence from asymptomatic community surveys in four regions, available now as a preprint: medrxiv.org/content/10.110…

Counting down to our Journal Club in 2 weeks! ⏳ We're excited to hear from Dr Zach Popkin-Hall, who will discuss the #malaria parasite species landscape in mainland Tanzania. Publication in Journal of Infectious Diseases: academic.oup.com/jid/advance-ar… Register on Zoom 👇 sanger.zoom.us/webinar/regist…


Our first newsletter of 2024 is here!🗞️ In this issue: 👥 Journal Club with Zach Popkin-Hall 🧬 Genomics labs in Mali 🇨🇻 Cabo Verde malaria-free 🔜 New look for the MalariaGEN website 🗣️ ASTMH 2024 Symposia 💉 Routine malaria vaccines in Africa mailchi.mp/malariagen/202…

📢 @MalariaGEN invites you to the first 2024 Journal Club on Jan 30, 1:30 pm GMT. 🌐 Dive into the landscape of malaria parasite species in Tanzania with Zach Popkin-Hall from University of North Carolina. More info: ow.ly/SAYf50Qtx9O




Happy to share that our brief report on asymptomatic malaria in Mainland Tanzania in 2021 was just published in Parasites & Vectors. Mostly Pf, but we found Pm and Po in all four regions we surveyed. IDEEL MSMT Jeff Bailey Deus Ishengoma parasitesandvectors.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.11…

C'était génial d'être encore avec l'équipe ReMA et Dr Innocent Ali à Dschang. Merci bien de m'avoir accueilli encore 🙏





Next at #GEM2024, Zach Popkin-Hall joins virtually to share results from a population genomics study of Plasmodium malaria in Africa. P. malariae is less common than P. falciparum and P. vivax, but its prevalence may increase as P. falciparum is targeted for elimination.



