I am a research fellow working in health and social care policy. I have a multidisciplinary background in clinical medicine and health economics. Throughout my academic journey, I particularly focus on behaviour economics such as policy evaluation, health inequality, time allocation, health and well-being and preferences elicitation using discrete choice experiments. Additionally, I also focus on epidemiological economics such as prediction of risk factors for diseases such as diabetes.
I have good research experience and collaboration with different research institutions, leading or contributing to various research projects. I previous had research experience at the University of Oxford, the University of Aberdeen, the Curtin University in Australia, the Duke-NUS Graduate Medical School in Singapore, the Nanyang Technological University in Singapore and the World Health Organization in Switzerland.
I hold a PhD in Health Economics from the University of Aberdeen, UK; a Master of Arts in Economics from the University of Illinois Chicago, United states; a Master of Philosophy degree in medical sciences from the Chinese University of Hong Kong; and a Bachelor of Medicine degree (MBBS) from Peking University, China.