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My Academic Website: MALF
https://maluque.netlify.app/
I received my PhD in Preventive Medicine (Epidemiology) and Public Health, awarded Summa Cum Laude, from the University of Granada (UGR, Spain) and the ULB (Universite Libre de Bruxelles, Belgium). Also, I hold a BSc in Mathematics and Statisticas from the Open University, an MSc in Biostatistics from the University of Newcastle, Australia, an MSc in Epidemiology from the ULB and, an MPH and health management from the UGR. After the completion of my Ph.D. in 2010, I moved to the Center for Infectious Disease Epidemiology and Research (University of Cape Town) as a postdoctoral fellow for two years. Afterwards, I moved to the Harvard School of Public Health (Department of Epidemiology), where I specialized in epidemiological methods from 2012 to 2015. I have also been trained as an Epidemic Intelligence Officer (EIS), and I worked as a field epidemiologist for several years in different African countries with Médecins Sans Frontières and GOARN-WHO during the Cholera epidemic in Haiti, 2010.
My research interests lie principally, but not exclusively in the field of epidemiological methods and comparative effectiveness research. At UCT, I used marginal structural models applied to large longitudinal data from Khayelitsha (HIV-Cohort) to assess the effectiveness of an observational, nonrandomized intervention Club of Patients. At Harvard, I used fixed effects methods in the context of the analysis of the components of the variance and within siblings design (observational cross-over) to evaluate the effect of a small fetoplacental ratio at birth on the risk of delivering a small for gestational age infant.
Currently, I am developing in collaboration with colleagues from the ICON group at the LSHTM data-adaptive methods for model selection and evaluation based on cross-validation techniques cvAUROC and applying advanced causal inference methods such as targeted maximum likelihood estimation TMLE to study social inequalities in cancer outcomes and survival. Furthermore, I am developing web applications to disseminate advanced causal inference methods and concepts i.e., colliders.
Link to my publications:
UGR
Google Scholar
ORCID
PhD Epidemiology & Public Health
University of Granada & Université Libre de Bruxelles
MSc Mathematical Medical Statistics (Biostatistics)
University of Newcastle, Australia
MSc Epidemiology & Biostatistics
Université Libre de Bruxelles, Belgium
MPH Public Health & Health Management
University of Granada, Spain
BSc (Hons) Mathematics
Open University, London, UK
My research focuses on epidemiological methods, causal inference, and health inequalities, with applications in cancer epidemiology and global public health. I develop and apply advanced statistical methods — including targeted maximum likelihood estimation (TMLE), machine learning, and counterfactual frameworks — to study social inequalities in cancer outcomes, survival, and broader population health.
I am also active in open-source statistical software development (Stata, R, Python) and in disseminating advanced causal inference methods to applied researchers worldwide.
Please reach out to collaborate 😃
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