Contact information
merryn.voysey@paediatrics.ox.ac.uk
+44 (0)1865 611314
Oxford Vaccine Group, CCVTM, Churchill Rd, Headington, Oxford, OX3 7LE
Research groups
Merryn Voysey
Professor of Statistics in Vaccinology
Merryn Voysey is Professor of Statistics in Vaccinology at the Oxford Vaccine Group. She has extensive experience in leading vaccines research including clinical trials and observational studies, and was the lead methodologist for the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine trials.
Merryn is the Principal Investigator of a global study of measles seroprevalence in infants from 9 countries, and is Chief Investigator of a randomised controlled trial assessing the early administration of measles vaccination in Ugandan infants. With funding from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, she is principal investigator of studies investigating the contribution of T-cell immunity to protection against SARS-CoV-2 infection, correlates of protection and vaccine efficacy for group B streptococcus vaccines, and a study of pneumococcal vaccine seroefficacy. In addition, she is co-investigator on the EDCTP3 funded PROTECT study: Preparing for Optimal Phase III/IV maternal Group B Streptococcal vaccine trials in Africa.
Merryn is a member of the WHO Technical Advisory Group on Group B Streptococcus Vaccine Development, the UK JCVI Subcommittee on GBS Vaccines, and the NIHR Health Technology Assessment Funding Committee. Additionally she chairs the Department of Paediatrics Athena Swan Data subcommittee.
In 2022 Merryn was awarded Australian of the Year in the UK by the Australian High Commission and was a guest of the Australian Government at Westminster Abbey for the Coronation of King Charles III.
Key publications
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Journal article
Voysey M. et al, (2021), Lancet, 397, 99 - 111
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Journal article
Voysey M. et al, (2021), Lancet, 397, 881 - 891
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Journal article
Voysey M. et al, (2018), Clin Infect Dis, 66, 913 - 920
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Journal article
Voysey M. et al, (2017), JAMA Pediatr, 171, 637 - 646
Recent publications
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Journal article
Qadri F. et al, (2024), Lancet, 404, 1419 - 1429
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Understanding COVID-19 testing behaviour in England through a sociodemographic lens : a population based study
Journal article
Bajaj S. et al, (2024), The Lancet Digital Health
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Journal article
Williams LR. et al, (2024), Vaccine, 42
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Journal article
Khaki JJ. et al, (2024), Sci Rep, 14
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Journal article
El Safadi D. et al, (2024), J Infect Dis