Ashleigh Howard is a research microbiologist specialising in controlled human infection models, with expertise in clinical studies involving streptococcus pneumoniae, respiratory syncytial virus, SARS-CoV-2, bacillus calmette-guérin, and salmonella paratyphi A. Her work focuses on delivering the microbiological aspects of experimental human pneumococcal challenge studies, including the production of challenge agents under good clinical practice-like conditions and endpoint analysis. Ashleigh has contributed to major research projects, including Preventing Pneumo 2, the FASTER study, which developed a rapid test for SARS-CoV-2, and the ChAdOx1 nCoV-19 vaccine trial.
She supports a portfolio of controlled human infection model research projects, ensuring regulatory compliance, coordinating multidisciplinary teams, and optimising study workflows to meet research objectives efficiently. Additionally, she provides support and guidance to the MARVELS team at Malawi-Liverpool-Wellcome Trust to help facilitate their controlled human infection model studies.
Ashleigh manages the daily operations of the Liverpool Vaccine Group laboratory, ensuring adherence to good clinical practice, good clinical laboratory practice, human tissue authority regulations, and medicines and healthcare products regulatory agency guidelines. She oversees inventory and sample management, resource allocation, budgeting, and financial reporting while identifying opportunities for continuous improvement. Additionally, she develops and implements novel laboratory techniques, establishes quality control policies and contributes to audits. As a CL3 expert user, Ashleigh ensures the safe operation of containment labs by training staff, enforcing biosafety protocols, and overseeing high-risk pathogen research.
She also mentors and develops laboratory staff, embedding diversity and inclusion within laboratory practices. Beyond research, Ashleigh is passionate about STEM outreach, delivering training and public engagement at events like the LSTM Time Machine Project, Clinical Trials Day, and Careers Day, to inspire future scientists.
Ashleigh’s main research interests are controlled human infection models, host-pathogen interactions and immune response, transmission dynamics, infectious disease epidemiology, antimicrobial resistance, vaccine development, microbial genomic diversity and innovative laboratory techniques.