Transforming Research into Community Health Impact

Accelerating the translation of research into action to improve nutrition, prevent communicable diseases, and strengthen the health of women and adolescents in Cameroon.

465+
Pregnant Women Studied
1,014
Nutrition Assessments
44
FGS Pilot Participants
3
Health Districts Covered

TRACH

Research that makes a difference

Malaria Prevention
Active Research
Women's Health
Community Impact
Nutrition
Food Security
FGS Research
Pilot Study
About TRACH

Bridging Research and Real-World Health Outcomes

TRACH is a centre committed to bridging the gap between scientific research and real-world health outcomes in Cameroon. We specialize in translating evidence from studies on communicable diseases and nutrition into practical, community-centred interventions that improve the well-being of women, adolescents, and their communities. Through collaborative research, capacity building, and active community engagement, TRACH works to strengthen health systems and promote informed decision-making at all levels.

Our Focus

Key Focus Areas

We concentrate our efforts on three critical areas that have the greatest impact on community health in Cameroon.

Communicable Diseases

Leveraging cutting-edge research to strengthen prevention, diagnosis, and treatment strategies for malaria, urogenital and female genital schistosomiasis, and other infectious diseases.

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Nutrition

Advancing evidence-based nutritional interventions to address undernutrition, micronutrient deficiencies, and food insecurity in vulnerable populations.

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Maternal & Adolescent Health

Supporting data-informed programs that improve reproductive health, reduce maternal and adolescent morbidity, and promote gender-responsive healthcare services.

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Research

Featured Research

Explore our latest findings and evidence-based insights shaping health policy and community interventions.

Malaria Prevention
Published Research

IPTp-SP Effectiveness in Pregnancy

Rethinking intermittent preventive treatment effectiveness: Evidence from three health districts in the Mount Cameroon Area. Coverage of ≥3 doses was ...

Key Findings:

  • 47% coverage of ≥3 doses
  • 18.5% placental malaria prevalence
  • ≥3 doses showed no added protection
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Resistance Monitoring
Key Finding

Drug Resistance & Malaria in Pregnancy

Assessing SP resistance mutations and their impact on malaria prevention in pregnant women. 874 pregnant women were screened with 66.9% of isolates ca...

Key Findings:

  • 66.9% SP-resistant mutations
  • ITN use reduced risk by 51%
  • Double mutations increased parasitaemia risk 6.65x
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Nutrition
High Impact

Dietary Diversity & Maternal Anaemia

Understanding the critical link between dietary diversity and maternal anaemia in the Mount Cameroon area. Only 10.4% had adequate dietary diversity w...

Key Findings:

  • Only 10.4% had adequate dietary diversity
  • 40.9% anaemia prevalence
  • Poor diet contributed 82.9% of anaemia risk
View Details
Resources

Highlighted Resources

Access our collection of publications, reports, and tools for evidence-based health program development.

12+

Impact Reports

Demonstrating improvements in disease prevention and health behaviours

8+

Implementation Science

Findings that guide program scale-up in real-world settings

15+

Policy Briefs

Evidence-based recommendations for national and regional stakeholders

25+

Publications

Peer-reviewed research in high-impact journals

Community

Community Engagement

At TRACH, we collaborate with community leaders, women's groups, and youth networks to raise awareness, promote prevention, and encourage early care-seeking. Through community outreach, awareness campaigns, flyers and posters, and by empowering peer educators as health champions, we enhance the uptake of essential services.

“Together with our communities, we build trust and shape healthier futures.”

Ready to Make an Impact?

Join us in transforming research into action. Whether through partnerships, research collaborations, or capacity-building initiatives, together we can strengthen community health.