Assistant Professor, School of Public Health
University at Albany, State University of New YorkEnvironmental Health, Environmental Science, Epidemiology, food system, Malaria, MRSA
Beth J Feingold, PhD is an interdisciplinary environmental health scientist. Bridging geography, epidemiology and global health, her research addresses the dynamic relationship among the food system, environmental sustainability and population health. Dr. Feingold earned her PhD in Public Health from the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, her Master of Environmental Science from the Yale School of Forestry and Environmental Studies, her Master of Public Health from Yale School of Public Health and her Bachelor of Arts in Geology from Vassar College. She was the Glenadore and Howard L Pim Postdoctoral Fellow in the Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences at Johns Hopkins University and a Postdoctoral Associate at Duke University’s Nicholas School of the Environment and Global Health Institute. She joined the University at Albany as an Assistant Professor in 2014. Research interests Anthropogenic (human-induced) changes to the environment affect and are affected by food production and consumption; this, in turn, impacts nutrition and human health. Dr. Feingold addresses these relationships locally, nationally and internationally by utilizing novel assessment tools and engaging communities. Her three main themes of research are: Assessing dietary and environmental drivers of disease risk in regions undergoing large-scale anthropogenic change Environmental, nutritional and health impacts of wasted food recovery & redistribution Impacts of large-scale agriculture on human health.
Infectious Diseases, Malaria, Risk Analysis
Strategic decision making, risk analysis, lone-wolf terrorists, infectious diseases, malaria, multicriteria decision analysis Professor Montibeller is available to discuss operation management, which includes sporting event such as Olympics and World Cups. A decision scientist, Gilberto is an experienced expert on behavioural operations.
Malaria, malaria control, Malaria Drug Resistance, malaria prevention, Malaria Research, Malaria Research Institute, Malaria Treatment, Mosquito Borne Disease
Dr Taneshka Kruger has been doing research at the University of Pretoria (UP) since 2012, which was when she did her postdoctoral fellowship on an innovative malaria mosquito vector control method. She joined the UP Institute for Sustainable Malaria Control (ISMC) as project manager and coordinator in the same year. Dr Kruger is also responsible for marketing the institute, and her research focus contributes to this.
Her research focus is innovative and novel malaria education and health promotion as proactive malaria transmission prevention methods and strategies. A large proportion of malaria deaths occur annually in children under five years of age. Dr Kruger’s research and communication initiatives often have her working directly with malaria-endemic communities, especially with young children of primary school age, in the rural Vhembe District in northeast Limpopo. The aim is to raise malaria awareness and to teach children how to prevent contracting the disease.
Malaria is still a major public health concern, with hundreds of thousands of people dying annually from the disease, despite it being both preventable and treatable. Dr Kruger says her research matters because it contributes towards proactive malaria prevention strategies, specifically identifying novel education and health promotion interventions that have the potential to contribute towards malaria elimination.