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Peggy S. Stanfill

Researcher at United States Public Health Service

Publications -  40
Citations -  587

Peggy S. Stanfill is an academic researcher from United States Public Health Service. The author has contributed to research in topics: Parasitemia & Saimiri sciureus. The author has an hindex of 14, co-authored 40 publications receiving 581 citations.

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Community-based malaria control in Saradidi, Kenya: description of the programme and impact on parasitaemia rates and antimalarial antibodies.

TL;DR: While the malaria control programme was successful in bringing treatment to each village, malaria prevalence was not reduced andMorbidity and mortality rates caused by malaria can decline, significantly improving the health of the population, in the absence of any decrease in parasitaemia rates.
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Studies on human malaria in Aotus monkeys. I. Sporozoite transmission of Plasmodium vivax from El Salvador.

TL;DR: The results of attempts to transmit a strain of P. vivax from El Salvador from monkey to monkey by sporozoite inoculation are reported.
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Sporozoite-induced infections of the salvador i strain of plasmodium vivax in saimiri sciureus boliviensis monkeys

TL;DR: It is proposed that by using a minimum inoculum of 10,000 sporozoites, the model system may be useful in the testing of anti-sporozoite vaccines directed against P. vivax.
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Immunization of owl monkeys with the ring-infected erythrocyte surface antigen of Plasmodium falciparum.

TL;DR: Immunization failed to induce protective immunity against the Uganda Palo Alto strain of P. falciparum as judged by maximum levels of parasitemia of immunized monkeys relative to those of controls, and the maximum level of paras itemia and serologic response to the 11-mer peptide were inversely correlated.
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Susceptibility of macaca fascicularis monkeys from mauritius to different species of plasmodium

TL;DR: The reinfection of 2 monkeys with P. cynomolgi suggested that some animals may be basically more resistant than others, whether splenectomized or not, to the production of high-density parasitemia.