David Hamer | Professor of Global Health and Medicine
Boston University School of Public Health

David Hamer, Professor of Global Health and Medicine, Boston University School of Public Health

Davidson Hamer, MD is a Professor of Global Health and Medicine at the Boston University Schools of Public Health and Medicine, the co-lead of the climate change and emerging infectious diseases research core at the BU Center on Emerging Infectious Diseases, and an attending physician in infectious diseases and Director of the Travel Clinic at Boston Medical Center. Dr. Hamer is a board-certified infectious disease specialist and medical epidemiologist with particular interest in emerging arboviral diseases, tropical medicine, travel medicine, maternal, newborn, and child health and nutrition (MNCH&N) in low- and middle-income countries (LMIC), infection control, and antimicrobial resistance. Dr. Hamer has been involved in travel medicine for thirty years and from 2014 to 2021, Dr. Hamer served as the principal investigator and, since September 2021, as the Surveillance Lead, of GeoSentinel, a global surveillance network of 70 sites in 30 countries that uses returning travelers, immigrants, and refugees as sentinels of disease emergence and transmission patterns throughout the world. In this role, he has been involved in outbreak identification and development of longitudinal prospective protocols for the arbovrial infections including chikungunya, dengue, and Oropouche virus. Dr. Hamer is currently the Scientific Program Chair for the American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, Section Editor for the Journal of Travel Medicine (sentinel surveillance in travelers) and the American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene (global health and Chagas disease). He also serves as the Secretary-Treasurer for the GeoSentinel Foundation. He has nearly 500 publications that cover a range of topics within the fields of global health (MNCH&N), travel medicine, COVID-19, and the epidemiology of disease in returning travelers.

Appearances:



Main Congress Day 1 - 22nd April @ 11:40

Keynote Panel: Chikungunya - a growing global burden exacerbated by climate change and globalization

  • Introduction of new vaccines and updating medical practice for Chik control.
  • How should we define outbreaks and how could we identify and predict hotspots?
  • How will we meet the demands of more vaccines as climate change drives the need further?
  • How can data science and digital tools transform climate-sensitive infectious disease modelling and response?
last published: 24/Mar/25 19:45 GMT

back to speakers