Melody S. Goodman is an American biostatistician whose interests include social determinants of health, health literacy, and stakeholder engagement in health research.[1] Goodman has spoken publicly about racial disparities in access to healthcare,[2][3] and is an advocate for public outreach and engagement on health issues.[4][5] She is an associate professor of biostatistics and associate dean for research in the New York University School of Global Public Health.[1]

Education and career

Goodman majored in economics and applied mathematics & statistics as an undergraduate at Stony Brook University,[1] graduating in 1999.[6] She went to Harvard University for graduate study in biostatistics,[1] earning a master's degree in 2003 and completing her Ph.D. in 2006.[6] Her dissertation, Statistical Methods for Community-Based Cancer Interventions and Health Disparities Research, was supervised by Yi Li.[7] She is African-American, but had no African-American professors throughout her education, and her later publications have included work on the diversity of students and faculty in public health.[8]

As well as at NYU, she has taught biostatistics at Stony Brook University,[9] where she was an assistant professor of preventive medicine,[6] and Washington University in St. Louis,[9] where she was an assistant professor in the Division of Public Health Sciences.[10]

Books

Goodman is the author of the book Biostatistics for Clinical and Public Health Research (Routledge, 2018).[11] With Vetta Sanders Thompson, she is co-editor of Public Health Research Methods for Partnerships and Practice (Routledge, 2018).

Recognition

Goodman was named a Fellow of the American Statistical Association in 2021.[12]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 "Melody Goodman", Faculty, NYU School of Global Public Health, retrieved 2021-07-09
  2. Williams, Joseph P. (March 25, 2020), "Rumor, Disparity and Distrust: Why Black Americans Face an Uphill Battle Against COVID-19", U.S. News & World Report
  3. Cerullo, Megan (August 25, 2020), "Moderna vaccine trial lacks Black, Latinx and Indigenous participants", CBS News
  4. Major, Derek (July 19, 2020), "Who Should Get Priority Access To COVID-19 Vaccine?", Black Enterprise
  5. Olson, David; Clark, Matt (June 9, 2021), "LI's Black, Latino communities make COVID-19 vaccination gains", Newsday
  6. 1 2 3 "Melody Goodman", Program in Public Health, Stony Brook Medicine, retrieved 2021-07-09
  7. Melody Goodman at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  8. Weissman, Sara (December 11, 2019), "Diversity at public health schools improves at a crawl, report finds", Diverse Issues in Public Education
  9. 1 2 Author biography from Biostatistics for Clinical and Public Health Research, p. xiii
  10. Melody Goodman named to HHS Regional Health Equity Council, Washington University in St. Louis Division of Public Health Sciences, November 10, 2011, retrieved 2021-07-09
  11. Mahmood, Nuha (June 2019), "Review of Biostatistics for Clinical and Public Health Research", Biometrics, 75 (2): 712, doi:10.1111/biom.13081, hdl:2027.42/151284, S2CID 202155175
  12. ASA Fellows list, American Statistical Association, retrieved 2021-07-04
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