Contact information
catia.nicodemo@economics.ox.ac.uk
Twitter @CatiaNicodemo Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/catia-nicodemo-5087124
HEALTH ECONOMETRICS AND POLICY EVALUATION COURSE
We run a course in health econometrics two times per year. This course will serve as an introduction to some of the concepts and principles in the economics of health and health care. It will provide an in-depth understanding of the tools usually used by health economists to address issues of health policy.
Apply here:
Dr Catia Nicodemo
Associate Professor in Health Economics
- Professor in Health Economics, Brunel University of London
- Ordinary Fellow, Kellogg College, University of Oxford
- Member of the Review Panel of the NIHR Predoc and London RfPB Committee
- Member of the Multimorbidity Committee NIHR
- CRES Research Fellow, UPF, Spain
- IZA Research Fellow, Germany
- Health Economics, Data Analysis, Labour Economics, NHS Workforce, Econometrics, Statistics, Cost-Effectiveness, Vaccines
- Consulting for Moderna, AstraZeneca, KholPharma
My research interests are:
- GPs Workforce
- Health Economics
- Medical Education
- Applied Micro-Econometrics
- Health Services and Public Health
- Labour Economics
- Big Data
- ORCHID, CPRD and QResearch Data
I am working on the following projects:
GP workforce, ARRS roles, Primary care data, Multimorbidity, Workload, Immigration, Maternal mental health, Children health outcomes
Projects:
Moderna: RSV Vaccination and Health Economics Cost
CARPE: ARRS roles in primary care
NIHR: Emergency Department and waiting Time
SPRC: Multimorbidity and inequality
ESRC: Maternal Mental Health
NHIR: Hospitals resilience during winter pressure
Horizon-2020: Immigration and health
I am looking for talented and energetic students to supervise their master or PhD projects. If you're interested, send me an email.
Research groups
Recent publications
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Overseas general practitioners (GPs) and opioid prescriptions in England
Journal article
Madia JE. et al, (2025), Health Policy, 159
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Resilience of the acute sector in recovery from COVID-19 pressures
Journal article
Bosque-Mercader L. et al, (2025), Social Science and Medicine, 375
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Investigating socioeconomic deprivation and antibiotic prescribing among older medicare patients using an instrumental variable approach
Journal article
Al Mohajer M. et al, (2025), Antimicrobial Stewardship and Healthcare Epidemiology, 5
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Bridging the pulse: Exploring inequalities in diabetes and hypertension medication prescriptions in Spain's immigrant and native communities
Journal article
Boggian L. et al, (2025), Economics and Human Biology, 57
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Ethnicity and health at work during the COVID-19
Journal article
Madia J. et al, (2025), Regional Science and Urban Economics, 111
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The Association between COVID-19 Status and Economic Costs in the Early Stages of the COVID-19 Pandemic: Evidence from a UK Symptom Surveillance Digital Survey
Journal article
Kim SW. et al, (2025), PharmacoEconomics - Open, 9, 231 - 245
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Clinical Characteristics of Virologically Confirmed Respiratory Syncytial Virus in English Primary Care: Protocol for an Observational Study of Acute Respiratory Infection
Journal article
Hoang U. et al, (2025), JMIR Research Protocols, 14
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Effect of Additional Roles Reimbursement Scheme roles on prescription patterns and patient satisfaction in England: a retrospective panel data analysis
Journal article
Nicodemo C. et al, (2025), British Journal of General Practice, 75, e28 - e34
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Gatekeeping in primary care: Analysing GP referral patterns and specialist consultations in the NHS
Journal article
Innocenti F. et al, (2025), Economic Modelling, 142
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Information provision and financial incentives in Catalonia's public primary care (2010–2019): an interrupted time series analysis
Journal article
Esteban-Fabró R. et al, (2024), The Lancet Regional Health - Europe, 47
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Medical school ranking and provider outpatient Medicare Part D claims for antibiotics among older patients in the USA
Journal article
Al Mohajer M. et al, (2024), JAC-Antimicrobial Resistance, 6