Sarah Lewington
BSc, MSc, DPhil
Professor of Epidemiology and Medical Statistics, Director of Graduate Studies (Taught courses)
- Leader, Global Population Studies Group
- Research Fellow, Green Templeton College
Sarah Lewington is an epidemiologist and statistician. She graduated in Mathematics and Statistics from Leicester University in 1988 and spent 5 years working as a medical statistician in the pharmaceutical industry before returning to university to study for an MSc in Applied Statistics at Southampton University. She came to Oxford University to co-ordinate the Prospective Studies Collaboration in 1995 and gained her DPhil in Epidemiology in 1999.
Sarah's main research interest is in major risk factors for premature adult mortality (particularly tobacco, alcohol, blood pressure and obesity) in low- and middle- income countries. The aim of the Global Population Studies Group is to support and build the local capacity required to conduct epidemiological studies in low-resourced settings. Such studies generate the reliable epidemiological evidence from diverse populations required to inform national and global health strategies for cost-effective control of non-communicable diseases. Over the past 20 years, the group has developed several international collaborations and is the Oxford-based lead for studies conducted in Russia, Cuba and India, involving 1.25 million participants.
Sarah is also Scientific Director for the MSc in Global Health Science and Epidemiology and Director of Graduate Studies for taught courses.
In 2016, Sarah was elected as a Research Fellow at Green Templeton College.
Sarah is Co-Chair of the World Health Organization's Reference Group on Health Statistics (WHO RGHS).With recent developments in global health and an increased focus on monitoring and accountability, the Reference Group was renewed in 2019 to ensure that WHO and its Member States continue to benefit from the best possible scientific and strategic advice and support in the generation, use, interpretation, and dissemination of global health statistics.
Recent publications
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Body composition and risk of incident heart failure in 1 million adults: a systematic review and dose-response meta-analysis of prospective cohort studies
Journal article
Oguntade A. et al, (2023), JAHA: Journal of the American Heart Association
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Body Mass Index and Risk of Hospitalization or Death Due to Lower or Upper Respiratory Tract Infection.
Journal article
Bohrmann B. et al, (2023), JAMA, 329, 1512 - 1514
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Independent Relevance of Different Measures of Adiposity for Carotid Intima-Media Thickness in 40 000 Adults in UK Biobank.
Journal article
Pillay P. et al, (2023), J Am Heart Assoc, 12
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Adiposity, Body Fat Distribution, and Risk of Major Stroke Types Among Adults in the United Kingdom.
Journal article
Pillay P. et al, (2022), JAMA Netw Open, 5
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Adiposity and NMR-measured lipid and metabolic biomarkers among 30,000 Mexican adults.
Journal article
Aguilar-Ramirez D. et al, (2022), Commun Med (Lond), 2