
Alphaxard Manjurano
London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, London, UK
Joint Malaria Programme, Kilimanjaro Christian Medical Centre, Moshi, Tanzania
Alphaxard is a MalariaGEN Data Fellow based in Moshi, Tanzania. He has a background in biomedical science and holds an Msc in Molecular Biology from the Interuniversity Programme of Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Vrije Universiteit Brussel and Universiteit Antwerpen, Belgium (September 2006). He is currently doing his PhD at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine in the UK.
Alphaxard has seven years of research experience with five years focused on malaria. Currently, he is working with the Joint Malaria Programme as a research scientist based in Moshi, Tanzania in the field of Molecular biology, Immunology and Genetic Epidemiology. He is also involved in the teaching and supervision of students at Kilimanjaro Christian Medical College in Moshi, Tanzania. He has been working with MalariaGEN as a data fellow since September 2006. This opportunity has equipped him with data management and analysis skills through the several data clinic workshops that have been held by MalariaGEN.
Alphaxard and his colleagues at Joint Malaria Programme and the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine are contributing to Consortial Project 1, Consortial Project 2 and Consortial Project 3. More >>
Relevant external links
- Low density parasitaemia, red blood cell polymorphisms and Plasmodium falciparum specific immune responses in a low endemic area in northern Tanzania.
- Publication: Prevalence and Determinants of Mastitis and Milk-borne Zoonoses in Smallholder Dairy Farming Sector in Kibaha and Morogoro Districts in E
- Publication: Target Antigen, Age, and Duration of Antigen Exposure Independently Regulate Immunoglobulin G Subclass Switching in Malaria
- Publication: Mastitis in smallholder dairy and pastoral cattle herds in the urban and peri-urban areas of the Dodoma municipality in Central Tanzania
- Publication: Estimating medium- and long-term trends in malaria transmission by using serological markers of malaria exposure
- Publication: Dried blood spots as a source of anti-malarial antibodies for epidemiological studies.