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In this talk I will introduce ideas from population biology and use them to help us understand emerging and novel pathogen spread. I will review our recent work on defining pandemics, detecting novel pathogens and approaches to controlling these novel threats. I will highlight our covid fieldwork and the advantages/limitations of detection methods for rare pathogens. 

Biography: I am a population biologist, Professor of Mathematical Biology in the Department of Biology and Fellow at St Peters College. Before Oxford, I held a Royal Society Research Fellowship and completed postdoctoral, PhD and undergraduate training at Imperial College.

Forthcoming events

Will the next pandemic be caused by H5N1 influenza?

Monday, 02 June 2025, 1pm to 2pm @ Richard Doll Lecture Theatre

Better treatment for tuberculosis

Monday, 09 June 2025, 1pm to 2pm @ BDI/OxPop Building LG seminar rooms

Resolving the genetic basis of type 2 diabetes in 125 000 Mexicans

Tuesday, 10 June 2025, 1pm to 2pm @ Richard Doll Lecture Theatre

The burden of drug resistant infections, the GRAM project

Monday, 16 June 2025, 1pm to 2pm @ BDI/OxPop Building LG seminar rooms

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