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Professor Emma McBryde
Professor

Emma McBryde

Email: 
Phone: 
+61 7 334 65070

Overview

Background

My research focus encompasses a broad range of methods – Bayesian Inference, statistical models, compartmental models, stochastic models, social network analysis, forecasting methods- and a broad interest in emerging pathogens –tuberculosis, influenza and hospital associated pathogens and emerging infectious diseases including SARS, Ebola and COVID-19. I have led research teams to complete international consultancies, modeling of tuberculosis control in our region, and international research collaborations in the area of tuberculosis, healthcare associated infections SARS and Ebola and COVID-19.

I have diverse cross-disciplinary skills, as an infectious diseases physician (FRACP) and mathematical modeler (PhD -QUT), epidemiologist, and biostatistician (MBios Uni Melb). Since 2003, I have worked on interleaving clinical research with mathematical modeling and simulation of infectious diseases transmission. In this time, I have developed the ability to communicate and collaborate across the disciplines of mathematics, biostatistics, epidemiology, public health and clinical infectious diseases. I lead a team of highly skilled mathematicians and biostatisticians, epidemiologists.

I am currently the Professor of Infectious Diseases Epidemiology at the University of Queensland Centre for Clinical Research, working with the ODeSI program. I continue clinical work as a physician for the TB control unit at the Torres Strait and Cape York Health Service. My collaborators across Australia include as a chief investigator on two Centres for Research Excellence in forecasting and in tuberculosis. I work with researchers in major national (Monash University, Australian National University, Curtin University and the Doherty Institute, UWA, UQ) and international universities (Imperial College, LSHTM, Harvard, Stanford, Oxford, Mahidol).

COVID-19 work to date includes providing modelling and advice for: the commonwealth Government, Victorian State Government, OzSage Indigenous working group, and leading the AUS-CMI Australian Covid-19 modelling initiative group, the Global Fund against Malaria TB and AIDS, and the World Health Organization in conjunction with countries in the Asia Pacific Regions.

My major methodlogical areas of research in active development are (1) forecasting (2) scenario analysis for decision support (3) disease dynamic insights through data analysis including Bayesian inference and machine learning.

Availability

Professor Emma McBryde is:
Available for supervision

Qualifications

  • Bachelor of Medicine Surgery, The University of Queensland
  • Bachelor (Honours) of Medicine Surgery, The University of Queensland
  • Doctor of Philosophy of Mathematics and Statistics, Queensland University of Technology
  • Doctor of Philosophy of Applied Mathematics, Queensland University of Technology
  • Masters (Coursework) of Biostatistics, University of Melbourne
  • Fellow, ACTnet The Australian Clinical Trials Network for tuberculosis research, ACTnet The Australian Clinical Trials Network for tuberculosis research
  • Fellow, Applied Mathematics Division of the Australian Mathematical Society, Applied Mathematics Division of the Australian Mathematical Society
  • Fellow, Australasian Society of Infectious Diseases, Australasian Society of Infectious Diseases

Works

Search Professor Emma McBryde’s works on UQ eSpace

228 works between 2002 and 2025

221 - 228 of 228 works

2007

Journal Article

An alternative scoring system to predict risk for surgical site infection complicating coronary artery bypass graft surgery

Friedman, N. Deborah, Bull, Ann L., Russo, Philip L., Leder, Karin, Reid, Christopher, Billah, Baki, Marasco, Silvana, McBryde, Emma and Richards, Michael J. (2007). An alternative scoring system to predict risk for surgical site infection complicating coronary artery bypass graft surgery. Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology, 28 (10), 1162-1168. doi: 10.1086/519534

An alternative scoring system to predict risk for surgical site infection complicating coronary artery bypass graft surgery

2007

Journal Article

Characterizing an outbreak of vancomycin-resistant enterococci using hidden Markov models

McBryde, E. S., Pettitt, A. N., Cooper, B. S. and McElwain, D. L.S. (2007). Characterizing an outbreak of vancomycin-resistant enterococci using hidden Markov models. Journal of the Royal Society Interface, 4 (15), 745-754. doi: 10.1098/rsif.2007.0224

Characterizing an outbreak of vancomycin-resistant enterococci using hidden Markov models

2007

Journal Article

A stochastic mathematical model of methicillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus transmission in an intensive care unit: Predicting the impact of interventions

McBryde, E. S., Pettitt, A. N. and McElwain, D. L.S. (2007). A stochastic mathematical model of methicillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus transmission in an intensive care unit: Predicting the impact of interventions. Journal of Theoretical Biology, 245 (3), 470-481. doi: 10.1016/j.jtbi.2006.11.008

A stochastic mathematical model of methicillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus transmission in an intensive care unit: Predicting the impact of interventions

2007

Journal Article

Letters to the editor [1]

Eisen, Damon P., Cheng, Allen C. and McBryde, Emma S. (2007). Letters to the editor [1]. Surgical Infections, 8 (1), 121-122. doi: 10.1089/sur.2006.093

Letters to the editor [1]

2006

Journal Article

A mathematical model investigating the impact of an environmental reservoir on the prevalence and control of vancomycin-resistant enterococci [3]

McBryde, Emma S. and McElwain, Donald L. S. (2006). A mathematical model investigating the impact of an environmental reservoir on the prevalence and control of vancomycin-resistant enterococci [3]. Journal of Infectious Diseases, 193 (10), 1473-1474. doi: 10.1086/503439

A mathematical model investigating the impact of an environmental reservoir on the prevalence and control of vancomycin-resistant enterococci [3]

2006

Journal Article

Bayesian modelling of an epidemic of severe acute respiratory syndrome

McBryde, E. S., Gibson, G., Pettitt, A. N., Zhang, Y., Zhao, B. and McElwain, D. L.S. (2006). Bayesian modelling of an epidemic of severe acute respiratory syndrome. Bulletin of Mathematical Biology, 68 (4), 889-917. doi: 10.1007/s11538-005-9005-4

Bayesian modelling of an epidemic of severe acute respiratory syndrome

2005

Journal Article

Comparison of contamination rates of catheter-drawn and peripheral blood cultures

McBryde, E. S., Tilse, M. and McCormack, J. (2005). Comparison of contamination rates of catheter-drawn and peripheral blood cultures. Journal of Hospital Infection, 60 (2), 118-121. doi: 10.1016/j.jhin.2004.10.020

Comparison of contamination rates of catheter-drawn and peripheral blood cultures

2002

Journal Article

Histoplasma capsulatum in peripheral blood smears

Kennedy, G. A., Curnow, J. L., Gooch, J., Williams, B., Wood, P., Pitman, C., McBryde, E. and Woods, M. (2002). Histoplasma capsulatum in peripheral blood smears. British Journal of Haematology, 116 (3), 503-503. doi: 10.1046/j.0007-1048.2001.03276.x

Histoplasma capsulatum in peripheral blood smears

Funding

Current funding

  • 2025 - 2028
    Sydney Asia-Pacific Partnership for Health Innovations and Resilient Ecosystems (SAPPHIRE) (DFAT Regional Health Partnerships Grant led by USYD)
    University of Sydney
    Open grant

Supervision

Availability

Professor Emma McBryde is:
Available for supervision

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Supervision history

Current supervision

Media

Enquiries

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