User Stats

Total reviews: 2
Level: Guru
Member Since: 12/05/2018

Profile Information

First name David
Last name Singleton
Help us confirm that you're an expert

I am a veterinary surgeon also holding a Master’s Degree in veterinary epidemiology and statistics. I am currently concluding a PhD (thesis submission August 2018) which focuses on big data surveillance of antimicrobial prescription and surveillance trends in companion animals (dogs, cats etc.). I work with the Small Animal Veterinary Surveillance Network (SAVSNET) at the University of Liverpool, and will be commencing a post-doctoral epidemiologist post with SAVSNET in August 2018. My role encompasses large scale EHR descriptive and inferential surveillance / epidemiology with outputs being published in peer-reviewed journals. I also frequently work with commercial companies (largely pharmaceutical) to produce epidemiological outputs to either disease of interest or to explore product usage in diverse animal populations. Though early in my career, I have secured or contributed to a number of small research grants, and am actively involved in the undergraduate teaching programme at my university.

Base
Name

David Singleton

I have professional experience in:

Bioinformatics, Digital Health, Genomics, Health tech, Predictive medicine, Veterinary Health, EMR / EHR, medical big data and analytics, population health management, predictive analytics

Help us confirm that you're an expert

I am a veterinary surgeon also holding a Master’s Degree in veterinary epidemiology and statistics. I am currently concluding a PhD (thesis submission August 2018) which focuses on big data surveillance of antimicrobial prescription and surveillance trends in companion animals (dogs, cats etc.). I work with the Small Animal Veterinary Surveillance Network (SAVSNET) at the University of Liverpool, and will be commencing a post-doctoral epidemiologist post with SAVSNET in August 2018. My role encompasses large scale EHR descriptive and inferential surveillance / epidemiology with outputs being published in peer-reviewed journals. I also frequently work with commercial companies (largely pharmaceutical) to produce epidemiological outputs to either disease of interest or to explore product usage in diverse animal populations. Though early in my career, I have secured or contributed to a number of small research grants, and am actively involved in the undergraduate teaching programme at my university.