A complete list of my published scholarly works can be found on my Google Scholar profile and/or on my Curriculum Vitae.
I have also led and/or contributed to several confidential technical reports. My doctoral research has been successful at securing several prestigious scholarships including: Mitacs e-Accelerate ($130k), the Ontario Graduate Scholarship ($15k), two-time recipient of the Queen Elizabeth II Scholarship for Science and Technology ($15k/each) and a two-time recipient of the Telfer PhD Student Engagement Award ($10k + $5k).
My doctoral research focused on understanding how people make differing decisions as it relates to preventative medicine (e.g., vaccines, facemask use, hand washing, cancer screening, etc.). Specifically, my research examined how decisions threshold are informed by regret and their cultural worldview.
Overall my research program seeks to address management challenges within health systems through a decision science approach. I approach my work through a dual aspiration of advancing the management literature through theoretical development and contribution to the fields of risk perception and decision theory, while also making applied contributions to health systems research through cost-effectiveness analyses and other statistical analyses to support the work of physicians and other healthcare professionals.