Moses Kamya

[1] Professor Kamya's research and teaching in infectious diseases spans a period in excess of 20 years.

He serves as Professor and Chair (Head) of the Department of Medicine at Makerere University College of Health Sciences.

This study found significant cryptococcal meningitis associated mortality persists, despite the administration of amphotericin B and HIV therapy.

[3] Cost-effectiveness of serum cryptococcal antigen screening to prevent deaths among HIV-infected persons with a CD4+ cell count ≤100 cells/μL who start HIV therapy in resource-limited settings.

This study concluded that light traps provide an alternative method for sampling indoor-resting mosquitoes to human-landing catches and have the advantage that they protect individuals from being bitten during collection, are easy to use and are not subject to collector bias.

[10] Novel serologic biomarkers provide accurate estimates of recent Plasmodium falciparum exposure for individuals and communities.