Michael has worked at Burnet since 2017. He is an epidemiologist and postdoctoral research officer in the HIV and Sexually Transmitted Infection Prevention group and Surveillance and Data Linkage group. Michael’s research involves analysing large surveillance data to examine epidemiological trends in infectious diseases and evaluate large-scale public health interventions, with a particular focus on HIV and bacterial STIs.
Michael is also a Research Fellow at the Department of Population Medicine, Harvard Medical School in Boston, USA, where he works on a range of projects related to HIV prevention among key populations.
Michael completed his PhD at Burnet Institute in 2022, where he explored the interplay between HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) implementation and the epidemiology of bacterial STIs among gay and bisexual men in Australia.
Key research interests include: infectious disease epidemiology, disease surveillance, HIV and STI prevention, biostatistics and sexual health.
Open Forum Infectious Diseases
Michael W Traeger, Brendan Harney, Rachel Sacks‐Davis, Daniela K van Santen, Edwina Wright, Margaret Hellard, Joseph Doyle, Mark Stoové, Michael W Traeger, Brendan Harney
Open Forum Infectious Diseases
Michael W Traeger, Brendan Harney, Rachel Sacks‐Davis, Daniela K van Santen, Edwina Wright, Margaret Hellard, Joseph Doyle, Mark Stoové, Michael W Traeger, Brendan Harney
We're taking a multifaceted approach to HIV prevention and supporting the health and wellbeing of people living with HIV.
ACCESS is a national sentinel surveillance network of sexually transmissible infections and blood-borne viruses.
This project addresses critical knowledge gaps in Australian and global efforts to eliminate hepatitis C as a public health threat by 2030.
A partnership aimed at increasing hepatitis C treatment uptake among people who inject drugs (PWID) using nurse-led models of care in community and prison settings.