I am a PhD Health Policy Candidate in the Department of Health Policy at Stanford University in the Decision Sciences track and a Fulbright-García Robles scholar.
Before starting my PhD at Stanford in 2022, I worked as a research assistant at the Center for Research and Teaching in Economics (CIDE) in Mexico.
In 2020, I joined the Stanford-CIDE COronavirus Simulation MOdel (SC-COSMO) consortium, where I worked on high-impact projects to estimate the health effects of non-pharmaceutical interventions to control the spread of the COVID-19 epidemic in Mexico. Additionally, as a member of the Cancer Intervention and Surveillance Modeling Network (CISNET), I worked on a project to model HPV transmission and cervical cancer disease at the state level in the United States.
My research interests are identifying cost-effective air pollution mitigation strategies and cervical cancer screening strategies to support decision-making in Mexico.
Ph.D. Health Policy | Decision Sciences
M.Sc. Environmental Economics
Dissertation: Ex-ante and ex-post willingness to pay for recreational servicies: the case of Aguascalientes, Mexico
B.S. Environmental Engineering
Diplôme d'ingénieur, double bachelor's degree
Evaluating the Health and Economic Impacts of Environmental Policies in Mexico City.
Sensitivity and identifiability analyses for efficient calibration of health policy models.
Regional heterogeneity and biased intervention effect estimates when modeling large epidemics.