Fritz Family Postdoctoral fellow in Epidemiology at Georgetown University | infectious disease modeling.
My website: https://giuliapullano.weebly.com/
Giulia Pullano
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Huge thanks to the students who led this work, B. Arregui and C. Ascione, and to @complexity72h.bsky.social—where this collaboration first took shape! Thanks to E. Valdano, @colincarlson.bsky.social, and a special thanks to my mentor @bansallab.bsky.social, who conceived this project with me
Giulia Pullano
Some coverage of the work: abcnews.go.com/Internationa...
Our new study shows how wildfire smoke drives people indoors, potentially increasing the risk of disease spread. We highlight how health is shaped not only by direct exposure, but also by the compounding effects of how people respond to climate extremes.
✨ Exciting News ✨
I’m honored to join the Network Science Society Board! My journey in network science began eight years ago. I’m excited for the opportunity to give back, support its growth, and contribute to advancing the field.
🙏 A big thank you to everyone who has supported my nomination! 🙏
Today Yundi Shi presented our work on how differential privacy algorithms applied to mobile phone data can impact the reliability of disease models. Exciting discussions on balancing privacy protection and public health needs!
Thank you to the Fritz Family Fellowship for supporting our research.
🚨 Excited to see our work published in @jmirpub.bsky.social🚨
Our study characterizes the geographical connectivity across spatiotemporal scales, highlighting the significant heterogeneities that influence disease dynamics. W/ L Alvarez-Zuzek @vcolizza.bsky.social @bansallab.bsky.social
Colin Carlson
Today I presented our new work at #Epidemics10 on understanding the drivers of influenza seasonality, with a particular focus on the role of indoor crowding and the built environment. It was so exciting to discuss it with so many experts in human flu! 😷 @bansallab.bsky.social
EPIcx diamonds 💎
Huge congrats 🎉🎉🎉 to the brilliant person behind this collaboration, @giuliapullano.bsky.social, who is building a very cool research program in this space - well worth following if you're interested in public health or climate change
🔥 When smoke from climate-linked wildfires drives people indoors, respiratory infections rise. But if 10% of people wear masks, this effect could be offset.
New research in PLOS Climate by Arregui-García and colleagues 👇
journals.plos.org/climate/arti...