
Meet the Executive Council

Daniel Kim
Founder & President
Daniel Kim, M.D., Dr.P.H., is an Associate Professor of Social Epidemiology in the School of Community Health and Behavioral Sciences at Northeastern University. His research broadly encompasses the social and economic determinants of population health. He has received several grants on the social determinants of health from the U.S. National Institutes of Health, and has published a variety of studies on the area-level effects of social determinants of health. He co-edited the textbook Social Capital and Health (Springer Press) with Ichiro Kawachi and S.V. Subramanian, and is author of the recent book New Horizons in Modeling and Simulation for Social Epidemiology and Public Health (Wiley & Sons, 2021) that highlights applications of modeling and simulation to public health and social epidemiology. He completed a medical degree and residency program in public health & preventive medicine at the University of Toronto, and earned his doctorate in public health (majoring in social epidemiology) from Harvard University. He also presently serves as an Associate Editor for the international journal Preventive Medicine and on the editorial boards of the journals PLOS Global Public Health and Social Science & Medicine – Population Health.

Tarani Chandola
Secretary-General
Tarani Chandola, D.Phil. is a Professor of Medical Sociology. He is the head of the department of Sociology and the director of the Methods Hub and Social Science Research Centre in the Faculty of the Social Sciences at the University of Hong Kong. He joined the Department of Sociology in August 2021 and was formerly the Head of Department of Social Statistics at the University of Manchester. He is a member of the ESRC Strategic Advisory Network Strategic Advisory Network and a fellow of the Academy of Social Sciences. He was formerly the editor-in-chief of the journal Sociology, the flagship journal of the British Sociological Association, and is currently an international advisory board member of the journal Sociology of Health & Illness. He was a panel member of the Sociology Unit of Assessment for the 2021 Research Excellence Framework, UK. He obtained his DPhil in Sociology from Nuffield College, University of Oxford in 1998.
His research is primarily on the social determinants of health, focusing on health inequalities and psychosocial factors, and the analysis of longitudinal cohort studies. His major research contributions have been on understanding the role of chronic stress related biomarkers in relation to psychosocial stressors such as poor working conditions. He is currently researching HPA-axis biomarkers associated with social isolation, loneliness and (resilience to) chronic pain.

Mauricio Barreto
Regional Councilor, South America
Maurício L. Barreto, M.D., M.P.H., Ph.D. (University of London) is an Emeritus University Professor at the Federal University of Bahia and a Senior Investigator of Fundação Oswaldo Cruz (Fiocruz), always based and working in its home State, Bahia- Brazil. His research in epidemiology and collective health covers different topics, with a great focus on the social and environmental determinants of health, health inequalities, and the impact of social, environmental and health policies and interventions on population´s health. He has published over 650 peer-reviewed papers in scientific journals. He has taught, supervised and mentored undergraduate, and master's, and Ph.D. students and postdocs throughout his life. He is the founder and head of the Center of Data and Knowledge Integration for Health (Cidacs, Fiocruz) and co-director of the NIHR Global Health Research Unit on Social and Environmental Determinants of Health Inequalities. His current major research program is around the 100 million Brazilian Cohort, particularly investigating the impact of poverty reduction policies on health, using the linkage of large administrative Brazilian databases. He is an elected Fellow of the Brazilian Academy of Sciences (ABC) and the World Academy of Sciences (TWAS) and an Honorary Professor at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.

Luisa Borrell
Regional Councilor, North America
Luisa N. Borrell, D.D.S., Ph.D. is a Distinguished Professor in the Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, City University of New York Graduate School of Public Health and Health Policy (CUNY SPH), New York, NY. She is a social epidemiologist with a research interest on the role of race/ethnicity, socioeconomic position, and neighborhood effects as social determinants of health. Her work on Hispanics’/Latinos’ racial identity brings attention to the need for disaggregated analyses by race as Hispanics/Latinos are a heterogeneous group with a mix of European, Native American and African ancestry. She also has expertise in research methods and analyses of large and spatially-linked datasets. Dr. Borrell has published over 190 articles and invited editorials. She has received funding from the National institutes of Health and has served both as a PI and as Co-PI. In addition, her work has also been funded through the Columbia Center for the Active Life of Minority Elder, W.K. Kellogg Foundation, Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, Columbia University Diversity Initiative Award and PSC-CUNY Awards. Dr. Borrell is a Fellow of the New York Academy of Medicine. She has a Doctor in Dental Surgery and a Master's in Public Health, from Columbia University, New York, NY, as well as doctorate in Epidemiological Science from the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI. Finally, Dr. Borrell has an extensive record in mentoring master and doctoral students, postdoctoral fellows as well as junior faculty.

Tania King
Regional Councilor, Australia
Tania King, Ph.D. is an Associate Professor and Social Epidemiologist at the Melbourne School of Population and Global Health, at the University of Melbourne. She uses causally focussed quantitative methods to understand social and structural determinants of health inequities across the life-course. Specific focusses of her work include: 1) gender equality and norms as determinants of health outcomes; 2) paid and unpaid work arrangements and conditions, particularly unpaid care; 3) mental health and suicide. Tania currently holds an Australian Research Council Discovery Early Career Researcher Award, and a University of Melbourne Dame Kate Campbell Fellowship.

Naoki Kondo
Regional Councilor, Asia
Naoki Kondo, M.D., Ph.D. is Professor and Head of the Department of Social Epidemiology and Global Health in the Graduate School of Medicine and School of Public Health, Kyoto University. His primary research themes are social determinants of health. He is the vice chief investigator of the Japan Gerontological Evaluation Study, a cohort study following up more than 100,000 older adults nationwide in Japan. His recent study focuses on how to address health inequality in the community settings, conducting intervention studies with local and central governments. Dr Kondo is a member of the Clinical Consortium for Health Ageing at the World Health Organization. He holds multiple roles as committee member and advisor for Parliamentary Groups and the Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare, Japan. He has published nearly 200 peer-reviewed papers in journals such as the Lancet, BMJ, and the International Jouirnal of Epidemiology.

Anne Kouvonen
Regional Councilor, Europe
Anne Kouvonen, Ph.D. is Professor of Social Policy at the University of Helsinki, Finland. She is also Honorary Professor of Social Epidemiology and Social Sciences in the Centre for Public Health, Queen’s University Belfast (Northern Ireland). Anne’s research focuses on the social determinants of health. In particular, she has been investigating employee mental health and socioeconomic inequalities of health. Her other current interests regard aging; migrant health; digitalization and social inclusion of migrants. Her research involves the application of social epidemiological methods and administrative record linkage as well as large-scale prospective survey designs and qualitative research.

Rebecca Lacey
Regional Councilor, Europe
Becca Lacey, Ph.D. is a lifecourse social epidemiologist based at the Population Health Research Institute, St George’s, University of London. Becca’s research focuses mainly on how aspects of the early family social environment influence mental health across the lifecourse. She currently leads two programmes of work. One on caregiving (particularly young and young adult carers) and health. The second on early life adversities and health. All of her work uses large population datasets, including the British birth cohorts, the UK Millennium Cohort Study and panel datasets (e.g. the UK Household Longitudinal Study).

Landon Meyer
Regional Councilor, Africa
Landon Myer, M.D., Ph.D. is Professor and Head of the Division of Epidemiology and Biostatistics in the School of Public Health at the University of Cape Town. With training in social anthropology, clinical medicine and epidemiology, his research focuses on women's, maternal and child health in the context of the HIV epidemic. He has lead multiple clinical, behavioural and health systems studies investigating the health of women and families in South Africa over the lifecourse, deepening understandings of the multilevel determinants of outcomes driving the burden of disease in southern Africa, including HIV and other infectious diseases (including tuberculosis and sexually transmitted infections), mental health and obesity/metabolic disorders. At UCT he teaches epidemiologic methods as well as infectious and non-communicable diseases epidemiology.
Meet the Communications & Membership Committee Chair

Emily Knapp
Emily A. Knapp, Ph.D., M.H.S. is an Assistant Scientist in the Department of Epidemiology at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. As a social epidemiologist, her research examines societal and economic determinants of obesity and other chronic disease, with an emphasis on strengthening measurement of these exposures. Dr. Knapp has a strong interest in research that guides policy and program-based interventions for the prevention and control of obesity. Her work focuses on the measurement of the obesity-related environment, which is crucial for identifying policies and programs that may prevent and/or control obesity and related chronic disease. Overall, her research centers on the application of epidemiologic methods to the prevention of chronic disease, including methods such as multilevel and longitudinal data analysis and measurement of the economic, social, and built environment.
Meet the Education
Committee Co-Chairs

Jhumka Gupta
Jhumka Gupta, Sc.D., is an Associate Professor in the Department of Global and Community Health within the College of Public Health at George Mason University. Her research program applies a social epidemiology framework towards advancing the science of gender-based violence against women and girls (e.g. intimate partner violence, sex trafficking). Specifically, she investigates the mental and reproductive health implications of gender-based violence, and conducts intervention studies aimed at reducing violence against women. Her primary focus is with vulnerable populations, both within and outside of the United States, and includes refugees, immigrants, and communities impacted by conflict. She also has a focus on stigma and gynecological disorders, such as endometriosis. Her work has been funded by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, World Bank, United States Institute of Peace, and Office on Women's Health, among others. She also serves as Associate Editor at the journal PLOS Global Health.
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Ankur Singh
Ankur Singh, Ph.D. is an Australian Research Council DECRA Senior Research Fellow at the University of Melbourne (Australia). He holds a joint position between Melbourne School of Population and Global Health and Melbourne Dental School. Ankur has research training in social epidemiology and he applies a range of quantitative and evidence synthesis skills to quantify the impact of policy interventions on health inequalities. His research contributions are in the area of population oral health, tobacco control and social determinants of health.
Meet the Student & Postdoc Committee Co-Chairs

Ariel Beccia
Ariel Beccia, Ph.D. (she/her/hers) is a postdoctoral research fellow in the Division of Adolescent & Young Adult Medicine at Boston Children’s Hospital/Harvard Medical School, working with Harvard’s Strategic Training Initiative for the Prevention of Eating Disorders (STRIPED) and the Sexual Orientation and Gender identity and Expression (SOGIE) Health Equity Research Collaborative. Her research focuses on identifying the social and structural determinants of gender- and sexual orientation-based inequities in mental health outcomes, with a particular focus on eating disorders. She is also interested in developing methods for incorporating intersectionality and other critical feminist theories into quantitative health research. Ariel earned her Ph.D. in epidemiology from the University of Massachusetts and a B.S. in Neuroscience with a minor in Gender & Sexuality Studies at St. Lawrence University.

Mary Brushe
Mary Brushe, Ph.D. is a senior research officer at Telethon Kids Institute where her research focuses on early childhood health and development, the impact of screen time, and children and adolescents' mental health and wellbeing. She has an Honours in Psychology and recently (August 2023) submitted her Ph.D. in Public Health through the University of Adelaide. Mary currently holds the roles of Vice President and Advocacy Coordinator for the South Australian Branch of the Public Health Association of Australia and the Treasurer of the Child and Youth Health Special Interest Group. She is experienced in the management of prospective cohort studies, epidemiological research methods, research translation for policy and practice and public health advocacy.