COLLECTION

REPORTS & PUBLICATIONS
WHO reports
Reviews & perspective articles
MALARIA MOLECULAR SURVEILLANCE
- Target product profiles of laboratory and data analytical frameworks for genotyping to monitor antimalarial efficacy
(Plucinski et al. 2026) - Regional action needed to halt antimalarial drug resistance in Africa
(Martínez-Vega et al. 2025) - A review on molecular markers of Plasmodium falciparum
(Abebe et al. 2025) - Researchers’ perspectives on the integration of molecular and genomic data into malaria elimination programmes in Africa: a qualitative study
(Tindana et al. 2024) - Towards integrated malaria molecular surveillance in Africa
(Dada et al. 2024) - Sampling for malaria molecular surveillance
(Mayor et al. 2023) - Bridging the gap from molecular surveillance to programmatic decision for malaria control and elimination
(Golumbeanu et al. 2023) - Genomic approaches for monitoring transmission dynamics of malaria: A case for malaria molecular surveillance in Sub–Saharan Africa
(Mensah et al. 2022) - Screening strategies and laboratory assays to support P. falciparum histidine-rich protein deletion surveillance: where we are and what is needed
(Beshir et al. 2022) - Implementing parasite genotyping into national surveillance frameworks: feedback from control programmes and researchers in the Asia–Pacific region
(Noviyanti et al. 2020) - Strengthening Surveillance Systems for Malaria Elimination by Integrating Molecular and Genomic Data
(Nsanzabana et al. 2019) - Applying next-generation sequencing to track falciparum malaria in sub-Saharan Africa
(Tessema et al. 2019) - Use cases for genetic epidemiology in malaria elimination
(Dalmat et al. 2019)
PATHOGEN GENOMICS
- How to sustain a public-health genomics and bioinformatics workforce in Africa
(Onywera et al. 2025) - Africa in the era of pathogen genomics: Unlocking data barriers
(Mboowa et al. 2024) - Genomic-informed pathogen surveillance in Africa: opportunities and challenges
(Inzaule et al. 2021) - Pathogen Genomics in Public Health
(Amstrong et al. 2019)
