Fellows Directory
George Smith
Professor George Smith FMedSci FRS
Fellow
Elected: 2019
Biography
George Davey Smith is a clinical epidemiologist who has focused on methods for improving causal inference in studies of disease aetiology and disease prevention. His work has involved early implementation of ‘negative controls’ in epidemiological studies, the use of cross-context comparisons, sensitivity analyses, unobtrusive data collection methods and randomized trials in thought-to-be difficult situations. He pioneered the use of germline genetic variants for investigating modifiable causes of disease (‘Mendelian randomization’), developed several extensions of the basic method, and contributed to its application in many settings. He is an advocate of the pre-specified application of a range of methods, with different structures of potential biases, to the same question (‘triangulation’), as the key approach to strengthening causal inference. Throughout his career he has promoted increasing the accessibility of data, and implemented this in studies he has led, including the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and their Children (ALSPAC).
Professional positions
Scientific Director , Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and their Children (ALSPAC), University of Bristol
Professor of Clinical Epidemiology, Population Health Sciences, Bristol Medical School, University of Bristol
Director, MRC Integrative Epidemiology Unit, University of Bristol
Interest and expertise
Subject groups
- Health and human sciences
- Clinical epidemiology, Medical statistics and demography
- Organismal biology, evolution and ecology
- Other
Keywords
Mendelian randomization, causal inference, genetic epidemiology, health inequalities