The complexity of infectious disease epidemiology, and the
interdisciplinary advances in disease control observed in the 20th
century in this country, suggest that a multidisciplinary approach is
essential to the study of future emerging and reemerging infectious
agents. The Harvard School of Public Health has a long history of
research in infectious disease epidemiology, in a variety of academic
departments.
The program in Infectious Disease
Epidemiology is enhanced by a growing body of research activity.
Research based in the Epidemiology department currently is focused in
the following key areas:
Epidemiology of pediatric HIV infection, including the impact of ART on long-term survival and other outcomes
The behavioral and biological aspects of HIV transmission and natural history, including vaccine trial design
Transmission dynamics and within-host population biology of infectious disease, combining in vivo
(murine) experimental studies with statistical and
computationally-complex mathematical modeling (population-dynamical)
approaches
Exhaled particles and their relationship to infectivity of influenza
Identifying risk factors for the transmission of drug sensitive and resistant M. tuberculosis, using molecular and conventional epidemiologic methods
Comparative genomics of M. tuberculosis strains, elucidating the genetic basis of transmissibility in drug resistant strains