ID Epi Seminar Series: C. Jessica Metcalf

Jessica Metcalf is a demographer with broad interests in evolutionary ecology, infectious disease dynamics and public policy. She completed her PhD at Imperial College on the evolutionary demography of monocarpic perennials. Her post-doctoral research was conducted at various institutions. She studied the evolution of senescence at the Max Planck Institute of Demographic Research, the inference of tree demographic parameters at Duke University, and infectious disease dynamics at Pennsylvania State University…

ID Epi Seminar Series: Sarah Leavitt

Kresge Building, Room 502, Harvard Chan School 677 Huntington Ave., Boston, MA

Sarah Leavitt is a fifth-year biostatistics doctoral candidate at Boston University. Sarah's research has been primarily focused on infectious disease research particularly tuberculosis. Her major projects include investigating spatial and temporal trends in TB care in South Africa and developing novel methods link cases in order to estimate the serial interval and reproductive number. Site: https://github.com/sarahleavitt

ID Epi Seminar Series: Brooke Nichols

Kresge Building, Room 502, Harvard Chan School 677 Huntington Ave., Boston, MA

Brooke Nichols, PhD, MSc, is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Global Health at Boston University. She is a health economist and infectious disease mathematical modeler. Dr. Nichols’ research experience and interests include modelling and economic evaluation of treatment as prevention (HIV and HCV) and pre-exposure prophylaxis (HIV), geospatial modelling for efficient resource allocation, and translating research into public policy recommendations. Site: https://profiles.bu.edu/Brooke.Nichols

ID Epi Seminar Series: Lauren Childs

Kresge Building, Room 502, Harvard Chan School 677 Huntington Ave., Boston, MA

Dr. Lauren M. Childs is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Mathematics at Virginia Tech. She develops and analyzes mathematical and computational models to examine biologically-motivated questions. A main focus of her work is understanding the pathogenesis and spread of infectious diseases, particularly those transmitted by mosquitoes, such as malaria and dengue. She considers the interactions within a host organism, such as between an invading pathogen and the immune…

ID Epi Seminar Series: Ben Lopman

Kresge Building, Room 502, Harvard Chan School 677 Huntington Ave., Boston, MA

Ben Lopman is Professor of Epidemiology at the Emory University Rollins School of Public Health.  He is an infectious disease epidemiologist with a research focus on vaccines and enteric viruses. His group conducts research globally and in the United States. Prior to joining the RSPH faculty in 2016, Dr. Lopman was with the Division of Viral Diseases at CDC where he led programs on enteric viruses and vaccine epidemiology.  Dr.…

ID Epi Seminar Series – Phil Arevalo

Kresge Building, Room 502, Harvard Chan School 677 Huntington Ave., Boston, MA

Dr. Phil Arevalo is a Ruth Kirschstein Postdoctoral Fellow at the University of Chicago with Professor Sarah Cobey and studies how infection history affects the development of the immune response to influenza. By modeling epidemiological and molecular data, he hopes to better understand how differences between people's immune responses arise and, in turn, feed back onto influenza evolution. As an NSF Graduate Research Fellow with Professor Martin Polz at MIT,…

ID Epi Seminar Series – Pia Abel-zur Wiesch

Kresge Building, Room 502, Harvard Chan School 677 Huntington Ave., Boston, MA

Pia Abel-zur Wiesch received her PhD from ETH Zurich with the oversight of Sebastian Bonhoeffer, and was awarded a medal for completing an outstanding thesis in 2011. From 2012 through 2015, she completed postdoctoral work with Ted Cohen at Harvard and Yale, with funding from the Swiss National Science Foundation, German Academic Exchange Service, and Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. From 2015 through 2017, she held a role as Visiting…

ID Epi Seminar Series – Sonja Lehtinen

Kresge Building, Room 502, Harvard Chan School 677 Huntington Ave., Boston, MA

Sonja Lehtinen is a postdoctoral research associate at ETH Zurich and works on the relationship between pathogen ecology and evolution and public health. Her research to date has focused on explaining puzzling trends in the frequencies of antibiotic resistance in Streptococcus pneumoniae. Her current work centerson the role plasmids play in resistance dynamics. Site: https://tb.ethz.ch/people/person-detail.MjYyNjQ5.TGlzdC80MzQsMTE0NzUxNTQwNQ==.html

CCDD COVID-19 Symposium

https://harvard.zoom.us/j/674738577?pwd=M2dLd3pJMXd5ZEc2N3lTVlA5UlY2Zz09