Ben Reis

Ben Reis, PhD

Associate Professor of Pediatrics, Boston Children's Hospital
Affiliate Member, Department of Biomedical Informatics, Harvard Medical School

Ben Reis is Director of the Predictive Medicine Group and a member of the Faculty of Harvard Medical School and the Boston Children's Hospital Computational Health Informatics Program. His research focuses on understanding the fundamental patterns of human disease and on developing novel approaches for predicting disease. He has conducted large-scale population studies of COVID-19 vaccine effectiveness and safety, and developed novel methods for tracking and understanding pandemics through digital information sources. He has created systems that allow doctors to predict dangerous clinical conditions years in advance, including suicide and domestic abuse, as well as predictive pharmacology systems able to identify life-threatening adverse drug side-effects years in advance. He has advised the US government on establishing national biodefense systems, the Hong Kong government on building health infrastructure in response to pandemics, and various governments on establishing biodefense systems in advance of hosting the Olympic Games. He has been honored at the White House for his work on harnessing social networks to promote health, and was named one of the top health innovators in the world by the US State Department, USAID and NASA.
 

Using administrative data to identify U.S. Army soldiers at high-risk of perpetrating minor violent crimes.
Authors: Rosellini AJ, Monahan J, Street AE, Hill ED, Petukhova M, Reis BY, Sampson NA, Benedek DM, Bliese P, Stein MB, Ursano RJ, Kessler RC.
J Psychiatr Res
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Predicting non-familial major physical violent crime perpetration in the US Army from administrative data.
Authors: Rosellini AJ, Monahan J, Street AE, Heeringa SG, Hill ED, Petukhova M, Reis BY, Sampson NA, Bliese P, Schoenbaum M, Stein MB, Ursano RJ, Kessler RC.
Psychol Med
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Developing a Risk Model to Target High-risk Preventive Interventions for Sexual Assault Victimization among Female U.S. Army Soldiers.
Authors: Street AE, Rosellini AJ, Ursano RJ, Heeringa SG, Hill ED, Monahan J, Naifeh JA, Petukhova MV, Reis BY, Sampson NA, Bliese PD, Stein MB, Zaslavsky AM, Kessler RC.
Clin Psychol Sci
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Feasibility of Prioritizing Drug-Drug-Event Associations Found in Electronic Health Records.
Authors: Banda JM, Callahan A, Winnenburg R, Strasberg HR, Cami A, Reis BY, Vilar S, Hripcsak G, Dumontier M, Shah NH.
Drug Saf
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Effects of Social Network Exposure on Nutritional Learning: Development of an Online Educational Platform.
Authors: Dagan N, Beskin D, Brezis M, Reis BY.
JMIR Serious Games
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Internet activity as a proxy for vaccination compliance.
Authors: Barak-Corren Y, Reis BY.
Vaccine
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Concordance and predictive value of two adverse drug event data sets.
Authors: Cami A, Reis BY.
BMC Med Inform Decis Mak
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Improved de-identification of physician notes through integrative modeling of both public and private medical text.
Authors: McMurry AJ, Fitch B, Savova G, Kohane IS, Reis BY.
BMC Med Inform Decis Mak
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Pharmacointeraction network models predict unknown drug-drug interactions.
Authors: Cami A, Manzi S, Arnold A, Reis BY.
PLoS One
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Developing software to "track and catch" missed follow-up of abnormal test results in a complex sociotechnical environment.
Authors: Smith M, Murphy D, Laxmisan A, Sittig D, Reis B, Esquivel A, Singh H.
Appl Clin Inform
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