Yale School of Public Health Microbial Diseases photo.
Microbial Disease.

School of Public Health > Academic Programs > Global Health Initiatives > GHI: Epidemiology of Microbial Diseases


Global Health Initiatives

About the School
of Public Health

Admissions

Faculty directory

Academic programs

Research programs

Student Services

Ph.D. & M.S. Graduate Program

Public Health Library

Alumni

News

Public Health Practice

Support the School

Calendar

Faculty and
Postdoctoral
Positions

Site directory

Contact us

Visiting Campus

Search

Epidemiology of Microbial Diseases

Control of African Trypanosomiasis (Sleeping Sickness)

Hookworm Pathogenesis and Vaccine Development

Control of Malaria

Control of Leishmaniasis

International Clinical, Operational, and Health Services Research and Training Award (ICOHRTA)

Integrating Sex and Drug–Related HIV Risk and Transmission

Alcohol & HIV Risk Reduction in St. Petersburg, Russia

Identifying HIV–Bridge Population in Sexually Transmitted Infections (STI) Clinics in Russia

NIMH Collaborative HIV/STD Prevention Trial

Risk Assessment of Sexually Transmitted Diseases (STDs) Among Injection Drug Users (IDUs) in Russia

Prevention of Drug Overdoses

Intervention for HIV+ Adults with Childhood Sexual Abuse

Health, Human Rights, and Foreign Policy

Epidemiology of Microbial Diseases

Hookworm Pathogenesis and Vaccine Development

Mother holding immunization card with baby

Human hookworm infection is a soil–transmitted helminth infection caused by the nematode parasites Necator americanus and Ancylostoma duodenale. It is a leading cause of anemia and protein malnutrition, affecting an estimated 740 million people in the developing world. Most cases occur in impoverished rural areas of sub–Saharan Africa, Latin America, Southeast Asia and China. In pregnant women, anemia resulting from hookworm disease has been associated with low birth weight, impaired milk production, and increased risk of death for both the mother and the child. In children, chronic hookworm infection has been shown to impair physical and intellectual development, reduce school performance and attendance, and adversely affect future productivity and wage–earning potential.

EMD and Yale School of Medicine Faculty are involved in:

  • Field studies in Latin America and West Africa aimed at characterizing human immune responses to hookworm infection, with emphasis given to parasite secretory antigens
  • Understanding how hookworms evade host defenses in order to feed successfully in the intestinal mucosa
  • Developing novel drugs, diagnostics and vaccines in order to control hookworm infection and disease transmission in endemic countries
 

YSPH Faculty:

Michael Cappello

Related Sites:

Dr. Cappello‚ Lab

Yale University  |  Medical School Library  |  Yale School of Medicine Info |   EPH Administration (restricted)

Yale School of Public Health  |  60 College Street  |  P.O. Box 208034  |  New Haven, CT 06520.8034

Copyright © 2006, Yale School of Public Health, New Haven, Connecticut, USA.
All rights reserved. Comments or suggestions to site editor. Site designed by ITS-Med Web Design & Development.

Last modified: December 16, 2008 [jp]