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A YSPH-led research team is investigating innovative new ways to identify and mitigate outbreaks of HIV among people who use drugs.
More than 100 Yale School of Public Health alumni turned out for the first in-person Alumni Day in five years on Oct. 6, attending an event-filled day at the New Haven Lawn Club that included lively discussions about the importance of data-driven leadership in public health, a poster contest, and the distribution of the annual alumni awards.
Data scientists in the Yale School of Public Health’s Department of Biostatistics are using advanced mathematical modeling to help public health professionals identify effective interventions and strategies to address today’s complex public health issues. By applying creative computer simulation and analysis, our scientists are pioneering new ways of investigating public health data in situations where more traditional forms of research are difficult to do due to logistical, temporal, or other barriers.
Researchers at the Yale School of Public Health say they were able to accurately predict outbreaks of COVID-19 in Connecticut municipalities using anonymous location information from mobile devices.
The Yale School of Public Health is offering a week-long virtual summer course in Public Health Modeling June 21-25. The course will cover the latest analytical and computational techniques in this growing public health field.
Sophisticated mathematical modeling and quantitative science were the topics of the fourth virtual Dean’s Workshop on the COVID-19 pandemic, held May 21, 2020.
As Connecticut tentatively reopens this week after a two-month shutdown, a new report by the Yale School of Public Health warns that if people resume normal activities and contacts too quickly there will be a “sharp resurgence” in hospitalizations and deaths in the coming months.
The Washington Post and the Yale School of Public Health have formed a partnership to research and report on the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic.
A third member of the Yale School of Public Health’s Modeling Unit has received a prestigious federal innovation award, bolstering the unit’s position as an international leader in modeling science in the field of public health.
Yale School of Public Health Assistant Professor Gregg Gonsalves has encountered many challenges fighting the HIV epidemic over the past 30 years. What he sees now has him as concerned as he has ever been.
The Yale School of Public Health is offering an intensive summertime course in health modeling to better prepare practicing professionals with the latest tools that they will need to address existing and emerging health challenges.
Former YCCI scholars, Christopher Pittenger, Eda Cengiz, Lucia Jilaveanu, Forrest Crawford, Tore Eid, and Shangqin Guo reflect on being a scholar.
The president will need to start listening to health experts if he’s going to eradicate the virus in the country.
The avoidable Scott County epidemic may reveal a terrifying future for public health in America.
In 2014, Scott County, Indiana, found itself in the middle of an HIV epidemic.
An HIV outbreak among people who inject drugs in Indiana could have been avoided if state officials had acted sooner, a Yale School of Public Health study finds.
Two Yale researchers have been awarded the National Institute of Health Director’s New Innovator Award — one of the most competitive grants for young scientists offered by the NIH.
A Yale School of Public Health researcher is one of the 2016 recipients of the NIH Director’s New Innovator Award. The prestigious award funds the work of investigators who are conducting highly creative, innovative research in the early stages of their careers.
A new concentration in public health modeling draws upon a range of faculty expertise and positions the Yale School of Public Health to become a leader in this emerging and increasingly important field.
The YCCI November 2015 Newsletter - Education Edition is available online. Meet the 2014 YCCI Scholars.