Dan Weinberger is a Yale public health professor and co-director of the Public Health Modeling Unit with eight years of focused experience in infectious disease epidemiology, microbial evolution, and vaccine-related statistical and time-series modeling. He bridges rigorous academic research and practical program evaluation, applying data science and real-world healthcare databases to disease surveillance and policy-relevant questions. His background includes postdoctoral work at Harvard and research roles at the NIH, reflecting deep methodological training from a Ph.D. in Infectious Disease Epidemiology at Harvard. Known for integrating bacterial evolution insights into population-level models, he combines laboratory-informed thinking with large-scale observational methods to generate actionable evidence for public health decision-making. Based in New Haven, he brings a rare blend of theoretical modeling skill and hands-on experience with healthcare databases that informs vaccine and surveillance strategies.
8 years of coding experience
19 years of employment as a software developer
Deerfield Academy
Frontier Regional School
Ph.D Biological Science/Infectious Disease Epidemiology, Ph.D Biological Science/Infectious Disease Epidemiology at Harvard School of Public Health
Bachelor of Science Biology, Bachelor of Science Biology at William & Mary
Analysis of coronavirus in Sewage in New Haven for Peccia et al
Contributions:4 PRs, 22 pushes, 4 branches in 3 years 7 months
haven
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Dan Weinberger - Professor at Yale School of Public Health