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What are the economic benefits of mass deworming of children?
August 14, 2015
World Economic Forum
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Replication research promotes open discourse3ie Impact - Evidence Matters
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Are deworming programmes beneficial?Cochrane
New research debunks merits of global deworming programmesThe Guardian
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Evidence for spending millions on deworming schoolchildren is inadequate, report saysThe British Medical Journal
Scientists Are Hoarding Data And It’s Ruining Medical ResearchThe Governance Lab @ NYU
This academic debate about worms has an important lesson for the future of global povertyVox
Mass deworming: (Still) a best buy for international developmentVox EU
Deworming: What’s the deal here?DevEx
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Explainer: Where were you in the #wormwars?The Guardian
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Can deworming treatments at Kenyan schools cut absenteeism?World Economic Forum
Good science gone wrong?The Berkeley Blog
Mapping the Worm Wars: What the Public Should Take Away from the Scientific Debate about Mass DewormingCenter for Global Development
Half of biomedical research studies don’t stand up to scrutiny – and what we need to do about thatThe Conversation
How to debunk a studyThe Economist
Worm WarsBritish Broadcasting Corporation (BBC)
What Has Been Learned from the Deworming Replications: A Nonpartisan ViewMacartan Humphreys
The author of a contentious study on deworming finally speaks outVox
Is it worth treating everyone who might get worms?British Broadcasting Corporation
Worms: Identifying Impacts on Education and Health in the Presence of Treatment ExternalitiesPublished PaperAfrican DevelopmentHealthEducation and Human CapitalResearch Methodology2004
Twenty Year Economic Impacts of DewormingPublished PaperEducation and Human CapitalHealth2021
Does Mass Deworming Affect Child Nutrition? Meta-analysis, Cost-effectiveness, and Statistical PowerWorking PaperHealthEducation and Human CapitalResearch Methodology2016
Worms at work: Long-run impacts of a child health investmentPublished PaperAfrican DevelopmentHealthEducation and Human CapitalResearch Methodology2016
The case for mass treatment of intestinal helminths in endemic areasPublished PaperAfrican DevelopmentHealthEducation and Human CapitalResearch Methodology2015
Commentary: Deworming externalities and schooling impacts in Kenya: a comment on Aiken et al. (2015) and Davey et al. (2015)Published PaperAfrican DevelopmentHealthEducation and Human CapitalResearch Methodology2015
The scientific case for deworming childrenThomson Reuters Foundation