E
Elizabeth Cameron
Researcher at Nuclear Threat Initiative
Publications - 6
Citations - 130
Elizabeth Cameron is an academic researcher from Nuclear Threat Initiative. The author has contributed to research in topics: Public health & Global health. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 6 publications receiving 63 citations.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Suboptimal US Response to COVID-19 Despite Robust Capabilities and Resources.
TL;DR: This Viewpoint attempts to reconcile the US’s high 2019 preparedness ranking on the Global Health Security Index, an international framework for benchmarking heared.
Journal ArticleDOI
The value proposition of the Global Health Security Index.
Sanjana J. Ravi,Kelsey Lane Warmbrod,Lucia Mullen,Diane Meyer,Elizabeth Cameron,Jessica Bell,Priya Bapat,Michael Paterra,Catherine Machalaba,Indira Nath,Lawrence O. Gostin,Wilmot G. James,Dylan B. George,S Nikkari,Ernesto Gozzer,Oyewale Tomori,Issa Makumbi,Jennifer B. Nuzzo +17 more
TL;DR: The practical value of the GHS Index is described and potential use cases to help policymakers and practitioners maximise the utility of the tool are presented, as well as describing the robust methodology underpinning country scores and ranks.
Journal ArticleDOI
Establishing a theoretical foundation for measuring global health security: a scoping review
Sanjana J. Ravi,Diane Meyer,Elizabeth Cameron,Michelle Nalabandian,Beenish Pervaiz,Jennifer B. Nuzzo +5 more
TL;DR: This review conducted a scoping review of English-language scholarly and gray literature to identify evidence- and practice-based indicators and proxies for measuring health security at the country level over time and synthesized four foundational principles for measuring global health security.
Journal ArticleDOI
Ebola and War in the Democratic Republic of Congo: Avoiding Failure and Thinking Ahead
TL;DR: The United States and international community should launch high-level political mobilization, with diplomatic, human, and economic resources, to improve the safety and effectiveness of epidemic response operations in the Democratic Republic of Congo.
Journal ArticleDOI
The biosecurity benefits of genetic engineering attribution.
Gregory Lewis,Jacob L. Jordan,David A. Relman,Gregory D. Koblentz,Jade Leung,Allan Dafoe,Cassidy Nelson,Gerald L. Epstein,Rebecca Katz,Michael Montague,Ethan C. Alley,Ethan C. Alley,Claire Marie Filone,Stephen P. Luby,George M. Church,Piers Millett,Kevin M. Esvelt,Elizabeth Cameron,Thomas V. Inglesby +18 more
TL;DR: This work believes a capability for detecting whether an organism involved in a human-caused biological event has been genetically modified and, if modified, to infer from its genetic sequence its likely lab of origin could be developed into powerful forensic tools to aid the attribution of outbreaks caused by genetically engineered pathogens.