Professor Nicholas PJ Day
Podcast interview
Infectious diseases in South East Asia
MORU aims to fight the infectious tropical diseases affecting rural communities in Asia and elsewhere in the developing world. MORU's malaria research aims to directly improve the treatment of the disease globally. It's researchers focus on the treatment of severe malaria, the spread of antimalarial drug resistance, and the pathophysiology of falciparum and vivax malaria. These studies are used to formulate novel adjuvant therapies, and have been translated into recommendations for the use of artemisinin based combination therapies.
Research groups
Colleges
Nicholas Day
MA BM BCh DM FRCP FMedSci
Professor of Tropical Medicine
- Director of the Mahidol Oxford Tropical Medicine Research Unit, Thailand, and of the Wellcome Trust Thailand Asia and Africa Programme
MORU
Nick Day's interests include the epidemiology, diagnosis, pathophysiology, pathogen biology, treatment and prevention of malaria, rickettsial diseases including scrub typhus, melioidosis, leptospirosis, rickettsial infections, influenza, dengue and other communicable diseases afflicting rural populations throughout Asia and beyond. Cross-cutting interests include the drivers and epidemiology of AMR, and the syndromic management of febrile illnesses and sepsis in LMIC settings.
Recent publications
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Journal article
Wang Q. et al, (2024), Wellcome Open Research, 7, 285 - 285
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Journal article
Chansamouth V. et al, (2024), Wellcome Open Research, 9, 183 - 183
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Journal article
Wang Q. et al, (2024), International Journal of Infectious Diseases, 146, 107151 - 107151
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Journal article
Wongnak P. et al, (2024), The Lancet Infectious Diseases, 24, 953 - 963
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Journal article
Suwarti S. et al, (2024), BMC infectious diseases, 24