Elle Lett

Elle Lett is a Black, transgender woman, statistician-epidemiologist and physician-in training. Through her work, she applies the theories and principles of Black Feminism to understanding the health impacts of systemic racism, transphobia, and other forms of discrimination on oppressed groups in the United States. She holds a PhD in Epidemiology from the University of Pennsylvania, master’s degrees in Statistics and Biostatistics from The Wharton School and Duke University, respectively, and a bachelor’s degree in Molecular and Cellular Biology from Harvard College. To date, her work has focused on intersectional approaches to transgender health and the health impacts of state-sanctioned violence and other forms of systemic racism. Now, she is turning her focus to algorithmic fairness in clinical prediction models and mitigating systems of inequity in health services provision. She is engaging in this new arm of research through a postdoctoral fellowship at the Boston Children’s Hospital Computational Health Informatics Program (CHIP), before returning to finish her clinical training.

Recent Papers

Intersectional consequences for marginal fairness in prediction models of emergency admissions
Elle Lett, Shakiba Shahbandegan, Yuval Barak-Corren, Andrew Fine, William G La Cava (2024)
Preprint
Effects of Race and Gender Classifications on Atherosclerotic Cardiovascular Disease Risk Estimates for Clinical Decision-Making in a Cohort of Black Transgender Women
Tonia Poteat, Elle Lett, Ashleigh J. Rich, Huijun Jiang, Andrea L. Wirtz, Asa Radix, Sari L. Reisner, Alexander B. Harris, Jowanna Malone, William G. La Cava, Catherine R. Lesko, Kenneth H. Mayer, Carl G. Streed (2023)
Health Equity

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