chicas-lancaster / websource

Source for the web site.
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Rhiannon #8

Closed RhiannonEdge closed 10 years ago

RhiannonEdge commented 10 years ago

Hi Barry,

Could you add the following to my page:

I started my PhD in Statistics and Epidemiology in January 2014, under the supervision of Dr Thomas Keegan and Dr Rachel Isba. Prior to this I completed a degree in Mathematics with Biology at Newcastle University in 2013. My interests lie in the effect of social network structure and influences on disease epidemiology. As a part of my research I am collecting data looking into reasons why seasonal influenza vaccine uptake in health care workers remains low, from a network perspective. Trends in vaccination within a social group could have implications for infection spread, and inter. As a part of my research I am collecting data looking into reasons why seasonal influenza vaccine uptake in health care workers remains low, from a network perspective. Trends in vaccination within a social group could have implications for infection spread. In an attempt to add to the growing interest in this area we plan to develop an influenza simulation model to use with the collected network data.

Thanks Rhiannon

barryrowlingson commented 10 years ago

On Tue, May 27, 2014 at 9:23 AM, RhiannonEdge notifications@github.comwrote:

perspective. Trends in vaccination within a social group could have

implications for infection spread, and inter. As a part of my research I am collecting data looking into reasons why seasonal influenza vaccine uptake in health care workers remains low, from a network perspective. Trends in vaccination

what does "and inter" mean there? Is that a mistake?

Barry

RhiannonEdge commented 10 years ago

Hi, Sorry, that whole paragraph is wrong... Don't know what happened there, here's a second attempt:

I started my PhD in Statistics and Epidemiology in January 2014, under the supervision of Dr Thomas Keegan and Dr Rachel Isba. Prior to this I completed a degree in Mathematics with Biology at Newcastle University in 2013. My interests lie in the effects and influences of social network structure on disease epidemiology. As a part of my research I am looking into reasons why seasonal influenza vaccine uptake in health care workers remains low, from a network perspective. I think this is particularly interesting as trends in vaccination within a social group could have implications for infection spread. In an attempt to add to the growing interest in this area we plan to develop an influenza simulation model to use with the collected network data.