Our Funding - Epidemiology

Our work in in Epidemiology is supported by funding from research councils, charitable organizations and government agencies. See below for some of our active grants in this area.

Bain, Maureen. Cute-Egg, improvement of eggshell cuticle quality to reduce vertical transmission of zoonotic and pathogenic organisms. Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council. 2013 – 2016.

Cleaveland, Sarah. Social, economic and environmental drivers of zoonoses in Tanzania (SEEDZ). Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council. 2014 – 2018.

Cleaveland, Sarah. Leptospirosis in Tanzania; a study of the role of rodents in an emerging public health problem. Wellcome Trust. 2011 – 2017.

Douce, Gill. Scottish Infection Research Network. CoPI Molecular epidemiology of Clostridium difficile in Scotland - developing novel, clinically applicable research methods to combine genomic analysis with health informatics. 2015.

Halliday, Jo and Haydon, Dan. Molecular epidemology of brucellosis in northern Tanzania. Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council. 2014-2017.

Halliday, Jo and Haydon, Dan. A One-Health approach to dissecting the diverse zoonotic causes of non-malaria febrile illness. Royal Society. 2014 – 2017.

Kao, Rowland. US-UK Collab: Mycobacterial transmission dynamics in agricultural systems: Integrating phylogenetics, epidemiology, ecology and economics. Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council. 2014 – 2018.

Matthews, Louise. Understanding supershedding of E. coli. Food Standards Agency. 2014 – 2017. [Op-ed on this topic]

Zadoks, Ruth. Hazards associated with zoonotic enteric pathogens in emerging livestock meat pathways (HAZEL). Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council. 2014 – 2017.