Joshua Salomon

Joshua Salomon Stanford Health Policy

Joshua Salomon, PhD

  • Professor, Health Policy
  • Senior Fellow, Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies
Encina Commons Room 114, 615 Crothers Way, Stanford, CA 94305-6006
(650) 736-9477 (voice)

Biography

Joshua Salomon is a Professor of Health Policy in the Department of Health Policy at Stanford School of Medicine, Senior Fellow in the Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies, and founding Director of the Prevention Policy Modeling Lab. Trained in health policy and decision science, Dr. Salomon leads multidisciplinary research teams dedicated to producing rigorous, actionable evidence to improve the public’s health and reduce health disparities. His work — supported by the National Institutes of Health, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation — combines data synthesis and mathematical modeling to measure and forecast health outcomes and evaluate public health programs and strategies, with particular emphasis on infectious diseases. He has spearheaded methodological innovation in measurement and valuation of health, infectious disease modeling and forecasting, and cost-effectiveness analysis. His applied modeling work on HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, viral hepatitis, COVID-19 and other major health challenges informs local, state, national and international policies to improve health and wellbeing, particularly among under-served populations in the United States and around the world.  

Dr. Salomon established the multi-institution Prevention Policy Modeling Lab in 2014 to conduct health and economic modeling that guides reasoned public health decision-making relating to infectious disease. He has co-authored more than three hundred original peer-reviewed research articles and mentored dozens of graduate and post-graduate trainees in health policy, medicine and public health. Prior to joining the Stanford Faculty, Dr. Salomon served as a policy analyst in the Department of Evidence and Information for Policy at the World Health Organization in Geneva, and as Professor of Global Health at Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health. As Associate Chair for Academic Affairs and Strategy in the Department of Health Policy at Stanford, he works on faculty recruitment and development, and leads strategic initiatives to promote interdisciplinary collaborative research, practice partnerships and policy translation.

Collaboration

In this recent Stanford Report article, Salomon talks about how he helped gather faculty, trainees, and other researchers from Stanford and elsewhere to lend expertise in infectious disease modeling and data analytics in hopes of informing the public health response to the COVID-19 pandemic locally and nationwide. This quickly-assembled unit used county data to build models that were updated in real-time and shared with county epidemiologists to track the impact of the epidemic, underlying transmission trends, and potential effectiveness of public health measures.

The unit also advised county epidemiologists on developing their own models for planning and envisioning different scenarios. “In the early weeks especially, we were learning more about the virus every day,” Salomon explained, “but we hadn’t yet seen the first peak of what would eventually turn into multiple waves, so there was a lot of uncertainty about when that peak might arrive, how high it could be, and what would happen next.”

Read Stanford Report Article

In The News

Prevention Policy Modeling Lab Team
News

Modeling Lab Awarded CDC Grant To Examine Effectiveness of US Disease Prevention

The Prevention Policy Modeling Lab evaluates the health impact, costs, and cost-effectiveness of infectious disease treatment and prevention programs in the United States, collaborating with academics and scientists from other universities and health departments nationwide.
cover link Modeling Lab Awarded CDC Grant To Examine Effectiveness of US Disease Prevention
Illustration of (W)Health Equity
News

SHP Faculty Contribute to New NASEM Report on Health-Care Inequities

The National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine updates its 20-year-old report on inequities in the U.S. health-care system, with expert advise from Stanford Health Policy researchers.
cover link SHP Faculty Contribute to New NASEM Report on Health-Care Inequities
Getty Images Illustration of TB
News

TB Continues to Prey on Underserved US-born Americans

In a new study by members of Josh Salomon's Prevention Policy Modeling Lab, the researchers found profound racial and ethnic disparities that are stalling overall progress against TB.
cover link TB Continues to Prey on Underserved US-born Americans