Professor Yoel Lubell
Contact information
Podcast interview
The economics of tropical diseases

Economics and health are interlinked in many ways, as seen in the vicious cycle between poverty and ill health. Merging data from various research areas within economic models allows a more efficient use of scarce resources. Economic evaluation helps ensure that cost effective interventions are included in policy recommendations.
Research groups
Yoel Lubell
Professor of Global Health
Head of EIRG
Yoel Lubell is Professor of Global Health at the University of Oxford, and leads the Economics and Implementation Research Group (EIRG) at the Mahidol Oxford Tropical Medicine Research Unit (MORU) in Bangkok, Thailand. EIRG focuses on the evaluation of diagnostics, treatments and vaccines for malaria and other infectious diseases using a variety of approaches ranging from economic and epidemiological modelling through laboratory investigations to clinical trials and qualitative research. Professor Lubell is Principal Investigator for the South and Southeast Asian Community Based Trial Network (SEACTN) and co-PI on Spot Sepsis, two of the largest studies to date aiming to improve our understanding of causes and outcomes of febrile illness in LMICs, facilitating the development of new tools to improve their management. He also oversees the Mahidol Oxford Translation and Innovation Programme, dedicated to speeding up the translation of MORU’s research into scalable interventions with tangible positive global health impact.
Recent publications
Predicting referral need for febrile children in low-resource community settings in South and Southeast Asia
Journal article
Chandna A. et al, (2026), Nature Medicine, 32, 1907 - 1916
Lessons from the field: implementing an electronic clinical decision support app for acute febrile illness in rural Cambodia
Journal article
Mishra A. et al, (2026), Transactions of The Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene
Impact of an electronic clinical decision support algorithm (eCDSA) on antibiotic prescribing in primary care in Cambodia: A cluster randomised controlled trial
Journal article
Wynberg E. et al, (2026), International Journal of Infectious Diseases, 164, 108382 - 108382
Estimating enteric fever seroincidence in rural western Cambodia: findings from a population-based cross-sectional serosurvey
Journal article
Zhang M. et al, (2026)
Democratising Evidence: How TrialUs Bridges the Knowledge Gap in Everyday Health and Wellbeing
Preprint
Lubell Y. et al, (2026)