The researchers are excited about the potential of the training partnership to not only help prevent and treat tuberculosis in Tanzania, but to generate new discoveries that will help battle diseases of poverty around the world.
“As ancient human conditions, malnutrition and tuberculosis do not often grab headlines,” Heysell said. “Yet our collective progress in improving these conditions is a bellwether in how well we are doing to reduce other socioeconomic inequities.”
About the Tanzania Tuberculosis Effort
UVA faculty and staff participating in the training partnership include Rebecca Dillingham, Tania Thomas, Eric Houpt, James Platts-Mills, Marcel Durieux, Amber Steen, Mark DeBoer, Richard Guerrant, Rebecca Scharf, Margaret Kosek, Christopher Moore and Megan Null Toerien. The effort is supported by UVA’s Office of the Provost and the School of Medicine.
The authors of the Lancet Microbe paper included Daniel Van Aartsen, Museveni Justine, Estomih Mduma, Stellah G. Mpagama, Mohammad H. Alshaer, Charles A. Peloquin, Buliga Mujaga, Athanasia Maro, Jean Gratz, Margaret Kosek, Jie Liu, Elizabeth T. Rogawski McQuade, Eric R. Houpt, Tania A. Thomas and Scott K. Heysell. The work was funded by the National Institutes of Health’s National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, grants U01AI115594 and T32AI007046.
The authors of the Lancet Infectious Diseases paper were Pranay Sinha, Knut Lönnroth, Anurag Bhargava, Scott K. Heysell, Sonali Sarkar, Padmini Salgame, William Rudgard, Delia Boccia, Daniel Van Aartsen and Natasha S Hochberg.
The NIH Fogarty grant is project No. 1D43TW012247-01.
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