One way that we ensure that our research has the maximum impact on the ground such as more than just resulting in academic papers and other research outputs is by writing guidance documents, manuals and health briefs for practionaners. We find that this avenue feeds our research into policy and positive change.

NOTE: The symbol (*) indicates work with supervised undergraduates, (#) for graduate students.

Moise IK, Riegel C, *Whittingham LR, Hurley J, Corrigan R, Del Sol J, Hanson C, Ruiz A and Coleman E. "Rodent Collaborative Workgroup D Development and Data Availability: Findings from a survey of key rodent organization representatives and experts." Health Policy Brief, March 2021. PolicyBrief.pdf

Moise IK, *Whittingham LR, Clark M, Omachonu V, Sheskin I, *Patel R, Meguro J, *Lucas A, *Bice W and *Thompson L. " United States Refugee Resettlement Agencies Capabilities during the COVID-19 Pandemic: Findings from a survey of refugee resettlement agencies." Health Policy Brief, June 2021. PolicyBrief.pdf

Moise IK, *Whittingham LR; Clark M, Omachonu V and Xue R. "Mosquito Control Capabilities in Florida During COVID-19." Health Policy Brief, July 2020. PolicyBrief.pdf

Moise IK. “The Lingering Effect of Natural Disasters on Drug and Alcohol Use.” Article Prepared for the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) Disaster Technical Assistance Center (DTAC) The Dialogue, 2019, 15(3-4):15-17. Accessible at: https://www.samhsa.gov/sites/default/files/dtac/dialogue-vol-15-issue-3-4.pdf.

Moise IK.Using geographic thinking to understand a wide range of social determinants of health and identification of at-risk groups in affected communities.” Blog Post Prepared for the American Evaluation Association AEA365 MSI Fellowship Week: A Tip-a-Day by and for Evaluators, January 20, 2017. Accessible at : http://aea365.org/blog/msi-fellowship-week-using-geographic-thinking-to-understand-a-wide-range-of-sdoh-and-identification-of-at-risk-groups-in-affected-communities-by-imelda-k-moise/.

Albert Nsonga and Moise IK.A manual for integrated fish-crops-livestock and forestry innovation systems in Northern Zambia.” Manual Prepared for CIFOR, Irish Aid, HarvestPlus and WorldFish, 2016. Accessible at: http://aquaticcommons.org/20959/1/2016-15.pdf.

Moise IK and Sen Roy Shouraseni. “Warming and increased rainfall are changing malaria hotspots in the highlands of Burundi.” Article Prepared for Atlas of Science, October 2, undefined 2016. Accessible at: undefined http://atlasofscience.org/warming-and-increased-rainfall-are-changing-malaria-hotspots-in-the-highlands-of-burundi/#more-16251.

Moise IK, Cunningham M and Inglis A. “undefined Geospatial analysis in global health monitoring and evaluation: A process guide to monitoring and evaluation for informed decision-making.” A Guidance Document Prepared for USAID funded MEASURE EVALUATION, undefined 2015). Accessible at: undefined http://www.cpc.unc.edu/measure/publications/ms-14-98undefined .

Moise IK, Zulu L, Shortridge A and Kalipeni E. “Spatio-statistical aggregate method: regression at an aggregated scale (administrative unit).” Models Developed for the Technical Consultation on Methods for Generating Sub-National Estimates of HIV Epidemiology to Support Country Programme Planning and Evaluation, UNAIDS Reference Group of Estimates, Modelling and Projections and UNAIDS Hotspot Taskforce, undefined 2014. Accessible at: undefined https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4867979/#R20undefined .

Moise IK, Kalipeni E and Ghosh J. “A third world perspective on GIS applications in health: The case of Zambia’s HIV/AIDS surveillance data.” Cover Page Prepared for the Computer Science of India Communications Knowledge Digest for IT community, 2012. Accessible at: http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/download?doi=10.1.1.362.3143&rep=rep1&type=pdf.