Exceptionally fun dedicated team who studies the epidemiology and outcomes of arboviruses and other vector-borne infections in order to improve community health
Happy 5th birthday to HERI! when we go together, we truly go far. 💚🌍So proud of five years of turning waste into opportunity, supporting women, feeding communities, and teaching the link between health and a clean environment. Donate here: https://t.co/UF1hluBw0b
Congratulations to Stanford University School of Medicine’s A. Desiree LaBeaud, MD, MS, Associate Dean of global health and Professor of pediatrics- infectious diseases, who was honored in May with the Stanford Medicine Office of Community Engagement’s outstanding Faculty Award.
Brian Dawes has been leading hantavirus research in the LaBeaud Lab. We have shown the first evidence of human hantavirus infection in Grenada (unrelated to current outbreak) , and Brian was selected for a Global Health Emerging Scholars Fellowship to detect hantaviruses in Kenya
We are so excited to share that A. Desiree LaBeaud has been honored with the ‘Outstanding Community Engaged Faculty Award’🎉👏 Huge congrats on this amazing and totally deserved recognition! 🎉✨
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So proud to highlight Dr. Amna Tariq’s work on climate change & malaria in Kenya + Pakistan 🌍
A powerful reminder of how environmental change is reshaping global health!
Read more here: https://t.co/bEJdczeK6Y
The new Equitable Global Partnerships Course materials are available through the following link. Meet the amazing teaching team!
https://t.co/8JtNZg4Jdu
📢 New course alert!
PEDS 237/EBS 238: Equitable Global Partnerships in Health and Beyond is a new course that will be taught in Spring Quarter. This course is designed to explore how equitable partnerships can address global health and
Visit here: https://t.co/4GRRNkv5x0
Stanford’s LaBeaud Lab and Climate Resilient Communities (CRC) are partnering to help residents of North Fair Oaks & East Palo Alto proactively reduce mosquito-borne disease risks. The pilot uses household surveys, community convenings, and bilingual tools to build local health.
Excited to announce our new HPH Catalyst-funded partnership with the Big Valley Pomo Tribe! This spring, Stanford researchers and Tribal leaders are launching “Old Medicine Meets New Medicine”, an Indigenous-led campaign exploring microplastics, pollution, and health.