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John B. Malone

Researcher at Louisiana State University

Publications -  83
Citations -  3702

John B. Malone is an academic researcher from Louisiana State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Geographic information system & Geospatial analysis. The author has an hindex of 34, co-authored 82 publications receiving 3432 citations.

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World Association for the Advancement of Veterinary Parasitology (W.A.A.V.P.) second edition of guidelines for evaluating the efficacy of anthelmintics in ruminants (bovine, ovine, caprine).

TL;DR: This second edition of the W.A.V.P. anthelmintic guidelines for ruminants includes updated guidance on standard parasitological procedures, dose titration, dose confirmation and clinical trials, and provides guidelines for evaluating products for efficacy against anthel Mintic resistant parasites, persistence of activity and prophylactic activity.
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Potential Impact of Climate Change on Schistosomiasis Transmission in China

TL;DR: A biology-driven model to assess the potential impact of rising temperature on the transmission of schistosomiasis in China found a temperature threshold of 15.4 degrees C for development of Schistosoma japonicum within the intermediate host snail, and a temperature of 5.8 degrees C at which half the snail sample investigated was in hibernation.
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A geographic information system forecast model for strategic control of fasciolosis in Ethiopia

TL;DR: Results suggest that the model can be extrapolated to all CPSZ in the country and adapted for use in control of other vector-borne diseases of economic and public health importance.
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A geographic information system on the potential distribution and abundance of Fasciola hepatica and F-gigantica in east Africa based on Food and Agriculture Organization databases

TL;DR: Results indicate that monthly forecast parameters, developed in a GIS with digital agroecologic zone databases and monthly climate databases, can be used to define the distribution range of the two Fasciola species, regional variations in intensity and seasonal transmission patterns at different sites.
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Satellite climatology and the environmental risk of Schistosoma mansoni in Ethiopia and east Africa.

TL;DR: Results suggest that Global 1-km NDVI and T(max), when used together, can be used as surrogate climate data for development of GIS risk assessment models for schistosomiasis in Ethiopia.