John Samuel Brownstein, Ph.D.

John Brownstein, PhD

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

John Brownstein is Chief Innovation Officer at Boston Children’s Hospital, a position shaped in large part by his career-long success in using emerging technologies to help clarify patterns of disease and promote public health interventions. His work has pioneered ‘digital epidemiology’—utilizing diverse digital data sources to understand population health—and his expertise here and in the area of geographic information systems has provided a key role in guiding DBMI on the consideration of place as a key disease risk factor. His portfolio at BCH includes grants from NIH, USAID, DoD, IARPA, CDC, Google, Skoll and Gates Foundation. Following receipt of his PhD in Epidemiology from Yale, Brownstein did a postdoctoral fellowship at Boston Children’s Hospital (BCH) before becoming a member of the faculty at BCH. 

Reverse geocoding: concerns about patient confidentiality in the display of geospatial health data.
Authors: Brownstein JS, Cassa CA, Kohane IS, Mandl KD.
AMIA Annu Symp Proc
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Interaction and transmission of two Borrelia burgdorferi sensu stricto strains in a tick-rodent maintenance system.
Authors: Derdáková M, Dudiòák V, Brei B, Brownstein JS, Schwartz I, Fish D.
Appl Environ Microbiol
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A dispersal model for the range expansion of blacklegged tick (Acari: Ixodidae).
Authors: Madhav NK, Brownstein JS, Tsao JI, Fish D.
J Med Entomol
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Enhancing West Nile virus surveillance, United States.
Authors: Brownstein JS, Holford TR, Fish D.
Emerg Infect Dis
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The potential of virulent Wolbachia to modulate disease transmission by insects.
Authors: Brownstein JS, Hett E, O'Neill SL.
J Invertebr Pathol
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A climate-based model predicts the spatial distribution of the Lyme disease vector Ixodes scapularis in the United States.
Authors: Brownstein JS, Holford TR, Fish D.
Environ Health Perspect
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Spatial analysis of West Nile virus: rapid risk assessment of an introduced vector-borne zoonosis.
Authors: Brownstein JS, Rosen H, Purdy D, Miller JR, Merlino M, Mostashari F, Fish D.
Vector Borne Zoonotic Dis
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