Jeffrey A. Bailey Source Confirmed

Affiliation confirmed via AI analysis of OpenAlex, ORCID, and web sources.

Researcher

John Brown University

faculty

12 h-index 65 pubs 642 cited

Is this your profile? Verify and claim your profile

Biography and Research Information

OverviewAI-generated summary

Dr. Jeffrey A. Bailey is a faculty member at John Brown University whose research spans diverse areas of health and disease. His work includes malaria research and control, lymphoma diagnosis and treatment, and trauma and emergency care. Bailey's broader interests encompass mosquito-borne diseases, hemostasis, coagulopathy, and resuscitation.

Metrics

  • h-index: 12
  • Publications: 65
  • Citations: 642

Selected Publications

  • Mapping mosquito diversity in Kenya correlating species distribution with malaria prevalence across varied climatic parameters (2026) DOI
  • Additional file 1 of Mapping mosquito diversity in Kenya correlating species distribution with malaria prevalence across varied climatic parameters (2026) DOI
  • Additional file 1 of Mapping mosquito diversity in Kenya correlating species distribution with malaria prevalence across varied climatic parameters (2026) DOI
  • Mapping mosquito diversity in Kenya correlating species distribution with malaria prevalence across varied climatic parameters (2026) DOI
  • Emergence of urban malaria and the associated risk factors: a case-control study in Mutare city, Zimbabwe (2025) DOI
  • Genetic Metrics Decodes <i>Plasmodium falciparum</i> Diversity: Complexity of Infections, Parasite Connectivity, and Transmission Intensity in Mainland Tanzania’s Diverse Regions (2025) DOI
  • Highly multiplex molecular inversion probe panel in Plasmodium falciparum targeting common SNPs approximates whole genome sequencing assessments for selection and relatedness (2025) DOI
  • Performance of Molecular Inversion Probe DR23K and Paragon MAD4HatTeR Amplicon Sequencing Panels for Detection of Plasmodium falciparum Mutations Associated with Antimalarial Drug Resistance (2025) DOI
  • The extended recovery ring-stage survival assay is a scalable alternative for artemisinin susceptibility phenotyping of fresh <i>Plasmodium falciparum</i> isolates (2024) DOI

Collaborators

Researchers in the database who share publications

Similar Researchers

Based on overlapping research topics