M
M. Elizabeth Halloran
Researcher at Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center
Publications - 270
Citations - 19557
M. Elizabeth Halloran is an academic researcher from Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center. The author has contributed to research in topics: Vaccination & Population. The author has an hindex of 56, co-authored 248 publications receiving 15685 citations. Previous affiliations of M. Elizabeth Halloran include University of Washington & Washington University in St. Louis.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Designing a Study of Correlates of Risk for Ebola Vaccination
TL;DR: Power and sample size calculations are explored to evaluate potential correlates of risk during an Ebola vaccination campaign in an outbreak and when vaccine efficacy differed the most between the high and low responder groups.
OtherDOI
Secondary Attack Rate
TL;DR: The secondary attack rate is defined as the probability that infection occurs among susceptible persons within a reasonable incubation period following known contact with an infectious person or an infectious source.
Journal ArticleDOI
Using simulated infectious disease outbreaks to inform site selection and sample size for individually randomized vaccine trials during an ongoing epidemic
Zachary J. Madewell,Ana Pastore y Piontti,Qian Zhang,Nathan Burton,Yang Yang,Ira M. Longini,M. Elizabeth Halloran,M. Elizabeth Halloran,Alessandro Vespignani,Natalie E. Dean +9 more
TL;DR: In this paper, novel strategies are needed to make vaccine efficacy trials more robust given uncertain epidemiology of infectious disease outbreaks, such as arboviruses like Zika, and a spatially resolved ma...
Posted ContentDOI
Achieving coordinated national immunity and cholera elimination in Haiti through vaccination
Elizabeth C. Lee,Dennis L. Chao,Joseph C. Lemaitre,Laura Matrajt,Damiano Pasetto,Javier Perez-Saez,Flavio Finger,Andrea Rinaldo,Jonathan D. Sugimoto,M. Elizabeth Halloran,M. Elizabeth Halloran,Ira M. Longini,Ralph Ternier,Kenia Vissieres,Andrew S. Azman,Justin Lessler,Louise C. Ivers +16 more
TL;DR: The probability of elimination and the potential health impact of OCV use in Haiti are assessed by leveraging simulations from four independent modeling teams, and the prospect of cholera elimination in the status quo and under various mass OCV campaign scenarios is examined.
Journal ArticleDOI
Validity of university students' self-reported vaccination status after a meningococcal B outbreak.
Angela K. Ulrich,Shannon B. McKearnan,Sara Lammert,Julian Wolfson,Jonathan Pletcher,M. Elizabeth Halloran,Nicole E. Basta +6 more
TL;DR: The findings suggest that the validity of self-reported vaccination status among university students in an outbreak setting is high, but that if the duration of protection is unknown and additional doses of vaccine may be needed, documented vaccination records may be preferred over self-report to assess timing of vaccine receipt.