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Olindo Assis Martins Filho
Stanford University
$304,448
Attributed
$608,896
Total exposure
1
Grants
0
Lead (contact PI)
Attributed= this PI's even-split share of every grant they're on (the fair, additive number). Exposure = full size of all those grants.
Funding over time
peak $157.4K · FY2020–23$200K$150K$100K$50K$0
'20
'21
'22
'23
Funding mix
By agency
NIH$608,896 · 1
By mechanism
R01$608,896 · 1
Top collaborators
- Angelle Desiree Labeaud4 shared
Most similar at Stanford University
Same institution · by research overlap
- Heike Elizabeth Daldrup-Link$23,256,656
- Steven Foung$16,127,140
- Peter Sarnow$27,278,753
- Jan E Carette$15,833,982
- Scott Dexter Boyd$18,651,021
Others in their field
Other Emerging Leaders on “Comorbidity”
- Carina Remgsamai-Nhe · Fisher Bioservices, Inc.$44,034,909
- Marlene Ann Cooper · Harvard University D/B/A Harvard School Of Public Health$42,295,422
- Jennifer Marie Suga · Kaiser Foundation Research Institute$29,218,159
- Abraham Aizer Brody · New York University School Of Medicine$21,799,826
- Maria C Carrillo · Indiana University Indianapolis$19,445,642
- Robyn Lorraine Woods · Hennepin Healthcare Research Institute$19,109,927
Research focus
ComorbidityConvalescenceAcuteAmericasAdultAntibody ResponseAfricaAreaBilirubinBiobankBiologicalAngolaBiologyBrazilCaringCause Of DeathCellular ImmunityCessation Of LifeClinical CareClinical DataClinically SignificantCohortCommunicable DiseasesDatabases
Grant awards (4)
Yellow fever in Brazil: new insights on an old disease$152,354
R01 · FY2023 · AI
Yellow fever in Brazil: new insights on an old disease$148,411
R01 · FY2022 · AI
Yellow fever in Brazil: new insights on an old disease$150,698
R01 · FY2021 · AI
Yellow fever in Brazil: new insights on an old disease$157,433
R01 · FY2020 · AI