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Georgia C. Richards

DPhil (Oxon) BSc (Hons I)


Honorary Senior Associate Tutor

  • Founder, Preventable Deaths Tracker
  • Module Coordinator, MSc EBHC
  • King's Prize Fellow, King's College London
  • Fellow, Pandemic EVIDENCE Collaboration
  • Network Member, ENTRUST-PE
  • Scientific Advisory Board, NPSUM
  • Meta-research Lead, TORCH
  • Committee, IASP MESISIG

Georgia is an epidemiologist and health research scientist with expertise in evidence-based medicine, open science, drug safety and death investigations.

She has over 50 peer-reviewed publications, a H-index of 16, and over 900 citations. 

Her research focuses on improving the safety of health interventions and care by understanding how to prevent premature deaths using data from coronial inquests. Georgia's interests are in opioids and interventions used in the management of people with chronic pain. She founded and leads the Preventable Deaths Tracker and the Catalogue of Opioids. 

Georgia has a Doctor of Philosophy (DPhil/PhD) from the University of Oxford (2021) and a Bachelor of Science with First Class Honours in Pharmacology from the University of Queensland, Australia (2015).

She coordinated and taught Evidence-Based Medicine (EBM) and systematic review modules for the Oxford Medical School and MSc in EBHC Knowledge Into Action.

Georgia is a King's Prize Fellow at King's College London, sits on the board of the National Programme on Substance Use Mortality (NPSUM), is a Founding Fellow of the Pandemic EVIDENCE Collaboration, the Meta-Research Lead for the Transparent & Open Research Collaboration in Health (TORCH), and on the core committee for IASP's Methodology, Evidence Synthesis, and Implementation Special Interest Group (MESISIG)

Research supervision

Georgia has supervised the research of over 40 undergraduate and graduate medical students and is actively supervising two MSc and three DPhil/PhD students.

She welcomes supervision queries from all students interested in: 

  • patient safety, preventable deaths, and harms in healthcare,
  • pharmaco-epidemiology and pharmaco-device-vigilance (i.e. medicine use and drug safety),
  • open science, open data, and meta-research.

Georgia has supervised students for medical electives, internships, Special Study Modules (SSM), Academic Special Interest Projects (ASIP), Special Study Themes (SST), and Final Honours Scheme (FHS) essays and research projects, which have all led to significant publications, including in the British Journal of General PracticeDrug SafetyJournal of Public HealthJournal of the Royal Society of Medicine (JRSM) Openamong others. 

Oxford DPhil research

Georgia's PhD research assessed the use and harms of strong pain medicines called opioids, which is summarised here and openly available for download here. She was based in the Centre for Evidence-Based Medicine and worked with members from the Bennett Institute of Applied Data Science

During her DPhil, Georgia was the early-career representative on the EBMLive Steering Committee and co-led the 2019 Doug Altman Scholarships and the 2022 David Sackett Fellowships, which funded early-career researchers from across the globe to attend EBMLive in Oxford. This led to various outputs including an editorial in The BMJ, opinion pieces in BMJ EBM on challenges facing early-career researchers and building capacity in low-middle-income countries, and a review in the Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine.

Georgia chaired the 2019 Steering Committee and report for the 4E's Forum to Improve the Detection, Analysis and Reporting of Harms in Medicines held in Erice, Sicily. 

Prior to Oxford

Before moving to the UK, Georgia worked as a medical researcher and health scientist in Australia. In 2016, Georgia was awarded the Australian Women of the Future Award, Judges Choice Winner, for her passion and dedication to continue pain research and help others. 

Declarations, disclosures, & competing interests

I am employed by King's College London and have an honorary contract at the University of Oxford. I have had travel expenses reimbursed to attend and present at conferences and received fees for speaking at events, training coroners, and teaching.

I am the Director of a limited company and receive fees from subscriptions to a personal Substack newsletter.

Between September 2017 and March 2021, I was financially supported by the NHS National Institute of Health Research (NIHR) School for Primary Care Research (SPCR), the Naji Foundation, and the Rotary Foundation to study for a Doctor of Philosophy (DPhil) at the University of Oxford. 

Recent publications

More publications