A student studying on a bench in the Azalea garden A student studying on a bench in the Azalea garden

Epidemiology & Biostatistics

About

The Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics prepares you to investigate the causes and risk factors of diseases and injuries in populations. Epidemiologists conduct both experimental and observational studies within the community, including studying the characteristics of individuals and their physical and social environments. Their findings provide public health practitioners and policy makers with guidance to promote health and prevent and control diseases and injuries.

You can learn from and participate with faculty members, most of whom are employees of the New York State Department of Health with University at Albany appointments. These faculty are actively practicing epidemiology and addressing the public health problems and priorities of New York.

Faculty at the New York State Department of Health Work in various offices, including the:

  • Bureau of Cancer Epidemiology
  • Bureau of Communicable Disease Control
  • Bureau of Community Environmental Health and Food Protection
  • Bureau of Environmental and Occupational Epidemiology
  • Bureau of Evidence Based Services and Implementation Science
  • Bureau of Hospital Acquired Infections
  • Office of Sexual Health and Epidemiology

 

Current Research Areas
  • Disparities
  • Genetic epidemiology
  • Infectious disease
  • Missing data techniques
  • Mixture models
  • Measurement errors
  • Social epidemiology
  • Stochastic processes
  • Time series
Two students sitting on a bench having a conversation
Department of Epidemiology & Biostatistics
Nikki Malachowski
Administrative Manager
Room 131

1 University Place
Rensselaer, NY 12144
United States

Phone
Fax
518-402-0380

Faculty

Epidemiology & Biostatistics Faculty
Associate Professor, Department Chair
Emeritus Assistant Professor
Dean of College of Integrated Health Sciences
Professor Emeritus
Assistant Professor Emeritus
Clinical Assistant Professor
Research Assistant Professor
Associate Professor & Graduate Program Director
Research Associate Professor
Adjunct Assistant Professor
Research Associate Professor
Research Associate Professor
Research Assistant Professor
Research Full Professor
Associate Professor
Associate Professor; Director of CEMHD
Assistant Professor

Retired and Adjunct Faculty

  • Baptiste, Mark, PhD
  • Birkhead, Guthrie S., MD, MPH
  • Carrascal, Alvaro, MD, MPH
  • DeHovitz, Jack, MD, MPH
  • DiRienzo, Gregory, PhD
  • Druschel, Charlotte, MD
  • Smith, Perry, MD
  • Strogatz, David, PhD, MSPH

Programs

Master's

Biostatistics MS | STEM | +CGS Option |

Biostatistics MS | STEM | +CGS Option |

Epidemiology MS | STEM | +CGS Option |

Epidemiology MS | STEM | +CGS Option |

Public Health MPH | +JD Option | +CGS Option |

Public Health MPH | +JD Option | +CGS Option |
Public Health MPH | +JD Option | +CGS Option |
Public Health MPH | +JD Option | +CGS Option |
Public Health MPH | +JD Option | +CGS Option |
Public Health MPH | +JD Option | +CGS Option |
Public Health MPH | +JD Option | +CGS Option |
Doctoral

Biostatistics PhD | STEM | +CGS Option |

Biostatistics PhD | STEM | +CGS Option |

Epidemiology PhD | STEM | +CGS Option |

Epidemiology PhD | STEM | +CGS Option |

Research & Projects

Featured Research Projects

 

Albany Infant and Mother Study (AIMS)

The Albany Infant and Mother Study (AIMS) is a prospective cohort study of pregnant women and their babies born at Albany Medical Center. Led by Principal Investigator Allison Appleton, this study is examining how prenatal psychosocial factors and aspects of the physical environment may jointly influence the growth, health, and development of children. The AIMS team is also examining the biologic and epigenetic mechanisms that may link psychosocial adversity and exposure to environmental toxicants during pregnancy with infant health and child development. To date, 300 mother and infant pairs have enrolled in the study, and follow-up with families is ongoing. The study population is largely socially disadvantaged and racially/ethnically diverse. The AIMS research team is interdisciplinary, blending theory and methods from epidemiology, obstetrics, psychology, anthropology, environmental health sciences, and molecular biology to improve the health and well-being for mothers and children and reduce health disparities.

 

Coalition for Applied Modeling and Prevention (CAMP)

CAMP, which has been based at the College of Integrated Health Sciences since 2019, develops epidemiological and economic models to predict the answers to important public health questions in the areas of HIV, viral hepatitis, sexually transmitted diseases, tuberculosis and adolescent health. CAMP received nearly $3 million in supplemental funding from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) to scale up its mathematical modeling work.

 

Childhood Adversity and Depression

Children who face adversity are at a significantly greater risk for severe depression, research out of the College of Integrated Health Sciences finds. Published in Depression and Anxiety, the official journal of the Anxiety and Depression Association of America, assistant professors Melissa Tracy, Allison Appleton and Tomoko Udo explain that more than half of adults report one or more adverse childhood events, such as parental mental health problems or financial hardship. The results of their study showed that the children in groups with higher levels of adversity had a higher risk of depression — and severity of depression — regardless of when the adversity took place.

 

Predicting and Preventing Violence

An interdisciplinary UAlbany team has received almost a half million dollars from the National Institutes of Health for a comprehensive study on violence, and the project is among the small number nationwide to receive a perfect score from the Institute. Led by principal investigator Melissa Tracy, an associate professor of epidemiology, the team will study the processes that contribute to violence within social networks and test strategies that could potentially prevent it.

 

UPSIDE Study

The College of Integrated Health Sciences is conducting the UPSIDE study, which is funded by the New York State Department of Health (NYSDOH) and aims to better understand Hepatitis C (HCV) and related issues among persons who inject drugs (PWID) in Upstate New York. Because HCV is most commonly transmitted by injection drug, a behavior which has been increasing as part of the drug epidemic in the U.S. and New York, the spread of HCV has been increasing. Although PWID are the priority group to understand ongoing spread of HCV, few research studies have been conducted on this population in upstate New York.

Principal investigators Tomoko Udo and Eli Rosenberg are leading the UPSIDE study, in partnership with syringe exchange programs run by Catholic Charities Care Coordination Services in the Capital Region, the Alliance for Positive Health in Plattsburgh, and the Southern Tier AIDS Program in Norwich.

 

International Collaborations

The Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics has international partners in China, Romania, Pakistan, and Japan. Leveraging partnerships with Sun Yat-sen and the Guangdong Cardiovascular Institute in Guangzhou, China, the Department has also created research placement/internship opportunities for graduate students to work on joint research projects. These placements have resulted in more than two dozen joint publications for our students. The Department has also provided summer training programs for clinical researchers, 10-week programs for visiting scholars, technical support to develop a new graduate-level epidemiology course at Kazakh National Medical University, and epidemiologic training programs for students from China.

Alcohol consumption and long term health
Adverse childhood experiences and cardiovascular diseases

Research Publications

  • 2022 (Coming soon!)
  • 2023 (Coming soon!)
  • 2024 (Coming soon!)

Meet Our Students

Assessing Impact of the Pandemic

Julia T. is earning her MPH with a concentration in epidemiology. The areas of public health she's most interested in are maternal and child health, health equity, and infectious diseases. She has completed an internship analyzing Medicare outpatient data and is currently conducting research at the New York State Department of Health's Division of Nutrition, assessing the impact of the pandemic on the collection of anthropometric data in the Pediatric Nutrition Surveillance System.

A portrait of Julia Tellerman

Changing Dental Hygiene in Rural India

Aditi Bhanushali is a dentist from India pursuing her MS in Epidemiology at UAlbany. She previously worked in rural parts of India, where the population had poor oral hygiene and lacked basic oral health awareness - and this made her interested in learning more about public health so that she could create change in her home country. Currently, Aditi is interested in infectious disease epidemiology.

A portrait of Aditi

Estimating Prevalence and Incidence of Hepatitis C

Meredith Barranco works on a project to estimate prevalence and incidence of hepatitis C infection among persons who use drugs in New York State. The data from this annual surveillance study will be used by the New York State Department of Health as one of the metrics to see if they will achieve the goal of eliminating HCV from the state. She is also currently in the process of publishing the results from the pilot study.

 

Predicting Answers to Important Public Health Questions

John Angles works as a research assistant for the Coalition for Applied Modeling and Prevention (CAMP) that aims to develop epidemiological and economic models to predict the answers to important public health questions in collaboration with the CDC and academic partners from a half dozen other universities. The results from this grant often directly inform policies and practices developed by the CDC.

 

Receiving Honorable Mention for their Covid-19 Response

Two College of Integrated Health Sciences students received honorable mention as "Students Who Rocked Public Health in 2021" by the editors of the Journal of Public Health Management and Practice. Since fall 2020, the students have assisted the University at Albany by running a daily report for campus surveillance testing. The report is shared with the university leadership every day to keep track of asymptomatic SARS-CoV-2 infection rate on campus, and informed risk mitigation strategies, including whether to implement surge test or "pivot" to remote instructions.

 

Sample Student Dissertation Projects

  • Assessing the impact of traffic-related air pollution and proximity to busy roadways on the health of newborns
  • Computationally efficient multiple imputation routines in multilevel data settings
  • Pregnancy women with congenital heart disease: pregnancy outcomes and proximity to care

Working at the AIDS Institute

Adaobi Okoro works as a research assistant for the Office of Program Evaluation and Research at the NYSDOH AIDS Institute that aims to conduct comprehensive, coordinated, and innovative program evaluation and research in multiple AIDS Institute program areas. The work from this office aims to enhance the quality of HIV, STD, Hepatitis C, and opioid overdose prevention services, clinical care, and service delivery systems in New York

A portrait of Adaobi.