Dr Roz Eggo
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rozeggo.bsky.social
Dr Roz Eggo
@rozeggo.bsky.social
Professor of Infectious Disease Dynamics.
Epidemiology. Modelling. Respiratory viruses. Vaccination. Electronic Health Records. Health Inequalities. Comorbidities. Open Science. Big Data. Policy support. Science Communication.
at LSHTM.
Run IDDjobs.org
Charlotte Rae telling us about the benefits of and methods to implement the 4 day working week.
June 10, 2025 at 1:30 PM
Looking for a position - postdoc, PhD, faculty - in infectious disease dynamics (broadly defined)?
Follow @iddjobs.bsky.social and check IDDjobs.org

This is a community site started in 2017 for open positions in our wide and varied field. Add your jobs, look for jobs, share opportunities!
January 21, 2025 at 9:22 PM
Finishing 2024 on a high note: delighted to be appointed Professor at LSHTM.

Thanks to many many people for support & advice along the way. 🙏

Looking forward to more exciting research, collaborations with amazing scientists, work with my fantastic team & PPIE colleagues.

Exciting times ahead! 🎉
December 9, 2024 at 4:20 PM
Tour de force talk by Cheryl Cohen (head of NICD & Prof at Witwatersrand) on detailed household epidemiology of respiratory viruses in South Africa in the PHIRST study.
The depth of insight coming from these kind of long-running, thorough epi studies is impressive!
She thanked participants first! 👏
November 27, 2024 at 1:34 PM
Kamran Abbasi from @bmj.com talking about importance of openness of code and data. And maintaining quality, diversity and integrity in research (&publishing).
November 25, 2024 at 2:25 PM
Hearing about neat analyses on Covid vaccine effectiveness and impacts using UK EHR data, at the OpenSafely symposium today.

I’ve been a part of the OpenSafely collaborative from the start and it’s inspiring to see the impact grow.

Secure data, open analysis, health benefit! OpenSafely.org
November 25, 2024 at 11:28 AM
This is a theoretical model to analyse how those factors could interact and intersect to result in health inequalities in the impact of Covid.

We found they could, and in our model there were more infections and clinical cases in more deprived strata.
November 20, 2024 at 12:09 PM