Dr Ellie Murray, ScD
@EpiEllie
Epidemiology asst professor @BUSPH |social media ed @amjepi | cohost @casualinfer podcast | Causal inference & public health #epitwitter🇨🇦 insta/🧵:laughing.e
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http://sites.bu.edu/causal 30-06-2013 16:11:58
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A new study led by Department of Population Medicine w/Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, U of U Sociology, Boston Children's, & Columbia Nursing collaborators found premature death higher among sexual minority women than their heterosexual peers.
Findings are online now in JAMA: buff.ly/3UvUx6E
1/10
Curious why statisticians recommend including the outcome in your imputation models? Check out our new paper in Statistical Methods in Medical Research! Sarah Lotspeich (She/Her), Staci Hepler, and I show with some simple mathematical derivations why this is really a requirement!
I just listened the amazing podcast of Casual Inference Podcast with Mark van der Laan on target learning.
For all my #EconTwitter friends, listen to it!
The discussion about estimand, causal gap, and the entire enterprise is just so clean and 💡💡🤌🤌🤌
Really great!
casualinfer.libsyn.com/targeted-learn…
Casual Inference Podcast Dr Ellie Murray, ScD And of course the winning cookie — Epi textbooks! Ingrid shared these were vanilla cookies with piped icing…YUM 🤤 Thank you Sarah B. Andrea, PhD, MPH for organizing this each year!
🎙️ On this week’s episode of Casual Inference, Dr Ellie Murray, ScD and Lucy D’Agostino McGowan chat with Ingrid Giesinger, our #EpiCookieChallenge winner, about her career and the many paths to epidemiology!
Listen on your favorite podcast app!
As we round out #BlackMaternalHealthWeek ,
I want to remind us all of a role our society plays in maternal deaths. We teach people to go to work/school and push through their pain. We teach young kids to ignore their bodies signals and prioritize productivity over health.