Dr Andrew Hope
- Senior Programme Manager, Vector Biology
- Centre for Neglected Tropical Diseases
Biography
Andrew Hope is a Senior Programme Manager working in the Departments of Vector Biology and International Public Health at Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine (LSTM). His work focuses on the large-scale implementation of tsetse control using Tiny Targets to accelerate the elimination of Gambian human African trypanosomiasis. Andrew is principal investigator for LSTM on the Trypa-NO! 3 and TrypElim projects which provide technical support to national control programmes in Uganda, South Sudan, Angola and Democratic Republic of Congo. His group’s work on the development and subsequent scaling-up of Tiny Target implementation led to LSTM being awarded a Queen’s Anniversary Prize in 2023.
Before he joined LSTM, Andrew worked for several different NGOs implementing disease control programmes in South Sudan and Central African Republic.
He obtained a BSc in Biology and Finance from Keele University and MSc in Biology and Control of Disease Vectors from London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. Andrew’s PhD studies were carried out at the Pirbright Institute in collaboration with the University of Liverpool, where he investigated host location behaviour of British culicoides species that transmit bluetongue and schmallenberg viruses to livestock.
Â
Research interests
Andrew’s research interests are in implementation/operational research. With the Tiny Targets programme, he is interested in exploring different strategies to deploy the technology to help to adapt and tailor the intervention for new geographic areas.
He is committed to capacity strengthening and works in collaboration with LSTM’s Centre for Capacity Research to strengthen vector control programmes in Uganda and the Democratic Republic of Congo.
Selected research publications
Development and pilot application of a point-of-need molecular xenomonitoring protocol for tsetse (Glossina sp.) in a low-resource setting – Journal: PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases – Published: 23rd March 2026
Impact of a national tsetse control programme to eliminate Gambian sleeping sickness in Uganda: a spatiotemporal modelling study – Journal: BMJ Global Health – Published: 30th October 2024
National capacity strengthening within the context of an international vector control partnership: Findings from a qualitative study conducted within the Ugandan ‘Tiny Targets’ programme. – Journal: BMJ Public Health – Published: 22nd April 2024
Modelled impact of Tiny Targets on the distribution and abundance of riverine tsetse – Journal: PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases – Published: 16th April 2024
A modelling assessment of short- and medium-term risks of programme interruptions for gambiense human African trypanosomiasis in the DRC – Journal: PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases – Published: 28th April 2023
View more publications