Soumyadeep Bhaumik

About Dr Soumyadeep Bhaumik

Head, Meta-research and Evidence Synthesis Unit, Health Systems Science

  • Conjoint Senior Lecturer, Faculty of Medicine and Health, UNSW Sydney
  • MBBS,
  • M.Sc. (international public health),
  • PhD,
  • FRSA

Dr. Soumyadeep Bhaumik is a medical doctor and international public health research methodologist striving to harness the power of science to drive just transformation for healthier individuals, communities, and nations.

As the Head of the Meta-research and Evidence Synthesis Unit at The George Institute for Global Health, he oversees an agile global team of researchers, specialising in using fit-for-purpose approaches for synthesising evidence to inform policies, practices, and guidelines. He is recognised internationally for his work on evidence synthesis, particularly research priority setting and core outcome sets -- both its conduct and methodological aspects. He also works on the moral and epistemological aspects of meta-research in health and medicine with the intent to transform the evidence ecosystem from justice-blind to pro-justice. Soumyadeep also conducts interpretive policy analysis to understand the societal construction and framing of public health problems. As a methodologist, he works in a disease-agnostic manner, although recent work has had a focus on snakebite.

Soumyadeep' s work has impacted the way research is conducted --through the Cochrane Handbook Chapter, which provides guidance on framing the scope of systematic reviews, development of reporting guidelines for research, and through methodological research. His work routinely influences guidelines, and policies of governments and multi-laterals. They have consistently been listed as one of the top 2% lifetime cited researchers (Stanford University analysis in General & Internal Medicine and Public Health field) since 2021.

The GIN-McMaster Guideline Development Checklist (GDC) Extension for Engagement

Journal of Clinical Epidemiology Date published:

Problems With Relevance, Certainty, and Misinterpretation of Empirical Evidence in the Umbrella Review “Health Effects of Drinking 100% Juice”

Nutrition Reviews Date published:

On the nature and structure of epistemic injustice in the neglected tropical disease knowledge ecosystem

PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases Date published:

Global, regional, and national burden of injuries, and burden attributable to injuries risk factors, 1990 to 2019: results from the Global Burden of Disease study 2019

Public Health Date published:

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