Faculty

Fredros Okumu

Fredros Okumu
Teaching

Past Core Course:

  • Insecticide Resistance in Africa – Challenges and Opportunities
  • Emergence of Drug and Insecticide Resistance

Malaria: Breaking the Cycle

  • Current and Future Challenges to Vector Control

Dr Fredros Okumu is director of Science at Ifakara Health Institute; associate professor of Public Health at the University of Witwatersrand, South Africa; a visiting researcher at the Federal University of Minas Gerais, Brazil; and an honorary research fellow at the Institute of Biodiversity, Animal Health and Comparative Medicine at the University of Glasgow. Since 2008, Dr Okumu has been studying human-mosquito interactions and developing new techniques to complement existing malaria interventions and accelerate efforts towards elimination. His other interests include quantitative ecology of residual malaria vectors; mathematical simulations to predict effectiveness of interventions, improved housing for marginalised communities, and prevention of child malnutrition.

He was awarded by the American Society of Tropical Medicine & Hygiene the Young Investigator Award in 2009, a Welcome Trust Intermediate Research Fellowship in Public Health and Tropical Medicine (2014–2019), and a Howard Hughes-Gates International Research Scholarship (2018–2023). He is currently a co-chair of the Malaria Eradication Research Agenda consultative group on Tools for Elimination, an associate editor of the journal, Parasites & Vectors, and  co-Chair of theVector Control Working Group on New Tools for Malaria Vector Control at the World Health Organization. Dr Okumu has also participated in various international expert panels on a wide range of subjects including, genetically modified mosquitoes and ivermectin for vector control, and the NEPAD Agency of the African Union’s agenda on biotechnology in Africa. He was inducted in 2016 as a Young Affiliate of the African Academy of Sciences and named among the 2016 Top 100 Global Thinkers by the US-based Foreign Policy Magazine.

He originally trained as a Public Health Officer in the College of Health Sciences at the Moi University in Kenya. He later earned a Master’s degree in Applied Parasitology from the University of Nairobi, Kenya, and a second Master’s degree in Geo-information Science, Earth Observation, and Environmental Modeling from Lund University, Sweden. In 2012, Dr Okumu earned a Doctor of Philosophy degree in Infectious Tropical Diseases from London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, and is currently working towards a Master of Business Administration in International Health Management at the Swiss Tropical and Public Health Institute, University of Basel, Switzerland.