Since June 2016 I have been a Senior Research Associate in Medical Statistics in the MRC Integrative Epidemiology Unit at the University of Bristol, with Prof Kate Tilling. I am looking at methods for understanding and accounting for missing data and selection bias, with application to the ALSPAC and ARIES data.
From June 2016 - Nov 2017 I worked 1 day a week as a Senior Research Associate in the School of Veterinary Sciences with Dr Kristen Reyher and Dr Katy Turner, looking at analysing drivers for antimicrobial resistance in cattle.
Prior to this I was a post-doc in the Department of Infectious Disease Epidemiology (DIDE), Imperial College, with Prof Christl Donnelly. I was part of a team collaborating with the WHO on the analysis of the Ebola epidemic in West Africa. From October 2012 to October 2014 I was a post-doc with Dr Steven Riley also in DIDE at Imperial College. I worked on spatial transmission models of influenza, within the FluScape project.
I studied Mathematics at the University of Bristol, graduating in 2008 with a BSc. I joined the Bristol Centre for Complexity Sciences doctoral training centre in 2008, completed my MRes (graduating in 2010) and started my PhD in January 2010 and graduated in January 2013. Further details of my PhD research can be found here.
A full list of my publications can be found on my University of Bristol webpage.
Research Interests
Understanding and accounting for selection bias and missing data in samples and surveys of populations and epigenetic datasets.
Identifying the drivers of emerging antimicrobial resistance on dairy farms and how to accurately measure medicine use on farms.
Developing methods to inform control efforts for emerging infectious disease outbreaks.
How the demographics, structure and interactions of populations can influence transmission of diseases, opinions and behaviours.
Other responsibilities
Data Visualisation Working Group: I co-organise a working group in data visualisation at the University of Bristol. This group meets monthly for talks and discussion sessions and has a wide membership across UoB and industry partners in the city. More details can be found on our website.