Hay attended the University of Bristol, where he studied zoology. He matriculated at the University of Oxford in the same year and gained his doctorate in epidemiology while at Green College, Oxford. Early influences during his doctoral studies were Sir Richard Doll and Sir Richard Southwood. Hay has remained at the University of Oxford where he is now a member of congregation and was awarded the title of Reader and then Professor. In 2012 he also became a Research Fellow in the Sciences and Mathematics at St John's College, Oxford where he gained a higher doctorate. In 2015, he became Professor for Health at the University of Washington and Director of the Local Burden of Disease at the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation. The Lancet Infectious Diseases published a biographical sketch, Simon Hay: mapping the world's ills summarising Hay's education, early career and influences. His work on mapping malaria and other vector-borne diseases, and more recently adding a geospatial dimension to the Global Burden of Disease Study, is described. Hay's future goal is to create high spatial resolution maps for all the diseases, risks, and injuries covered by the GBD, which could be possible in the next 10 years with advances in technology. Influential colleagues in the field, Peter Hotez and Jeremy Farrar acknowledge Prof. Hay's geospatial vision in presenting complex data sets in an accessible way that has led to policy changes worldwide. Kofi Annan recognised the importance of Hay's recent work in his article, saying, “Such fine-grained insight brings tremendous responsibility to act.” Published in Nature , these high-resolution maps of child growth failure, and educational attainment, clearly illustrate local progress made during the Millennium Development Goal era, as well as, some entrenched inequalities across the continent, that need significant attention in the Sustainable Development Goal era. As well as working on these Nature papers, Hay's Local Burden of Disease team explores health trends at a high spatial resolution to provide information to local decision-makers.
Research
Hay investigates spatial and temporal aspects of infectious disease epidemiology to support the more rational implementation of disease control and intervention strategies.