Quantifying the effect of human population mobility on malaria risk in the Peruvian Amazon Gabriel Carrasco-Escobar Jul 20, 2022 Go to Project Site Royal Society Open Science Infectious Diseases Human Movement Health Data Science Gabriel Carrasco-Escobar Assistant Professor My research interests include infectious diseases epidemiology, causal inference, global health, Climate Change, Data Science, Urban Health, and Geospatial modeling & viz. Related Quantifying the effect of human population mobility on malaria risk in the Peruvian Amazon Open-Source 3D Printable GPS Tracker to Characterize the Role of Human Population Movement on Malaria Epidemiology in River Networks: A Proof-of-Concept Study in the Peruvian Amazon Open-Source 3D Printable GPS Tracker to Characterize the Role of Human Population Movement on Malaria Epidemiology in River Networks: A Proof-of-Concept Study in the Peruvian Amazon Travel Time to Health Facilities as a Marker of Geographical Accessibility Across Heterogeneous Land Coverage in Peru Revealing the air pollution burden associated with internal Migration in Peru