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COERE Unit Steering Committee Members
Jeroan Allison, M.D., M.S., Associate Director of COERE,
is Associate Professor in the Department of Medicine, Division of
General Internal Medicine, School of Medicine at the University
of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB). Dr. Allison is an experienced
health services researcher with expertise in developing clinically
meaningful process of care indicators and translating clinical practice
guidelines into concrete computerized algorithms for measuring performance
and delivering data-driven feedback to providers. He is also experienced
in the design and use of benchmarks for quality improvement and
in the analysis of chart abstraction data and claims data.
Dr. Allison received his medical degree from the University of Alabama
at Birmingham and completed his residency in Internal Medicine,
also at the University of Alabama at Birmingham. He went on to complete
a Fellowship in Medical Informatics at the Marine Biology Lab at
Woodshole and participates in the UAB Medical Informatics training
program for medical residents. In addition to his medical
training, Dr. Allison received a Masters of Science in Epidemiology
at Harvard University School of Public Health.
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Eta Berner, Ed.D., is Professor of Health Services Administration in the School of Health
Related Professions and a Senior Scientist in the Center for Outcomes
and Effectiveness Research and Education at the University of Alabama
at Birmingham (UAB). She teaches health informatics courses
to graduate students in Health Informatics and Health Administration.
Her research interests include (1) Evaluation
of the use and impact on quality improvement and medical error reduction
of clinical decision support systems and other health information
technologies by health professional students and practitioners;(
2) Evaluating the impact of innovative educational approaches, including
distance learning and collaborative videoconferencing methodologies.
Her current research project funded by the Agency for Healthcare
Research and Quality is on evaluating handheld decision support
systems on patient safety. She has previously received research
funding from the
National Library of Medicine, the National Board of Medical Examiners,
the Bureau of Health Professions, and the National Heart, Lung,
and Blood Institute. Dr. Berner is a Fellow of the American
College of Medical Informatics and has published articles in leading
journals including the New England Journal of Medicine, Medical
Care, Academic Medicine and the Journal of the American Medical
Informatics Association. She is the editor of a book entitled Clinical
Decision Support Systems: Theory and Practice (1999, Springer-Verlag).
Dr. Berner has been a World Health Organization consultant and has
served in leadership positions at the national level in professional
informatics and health professions educational organizations.
Dr. Berner serves on AHRQ's Healthcare Technology and Decision Sciences
Study Section and she is a member of the editorial board of the
Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association, the Journal
of Healthcare Information Management, and Medical Education Online.
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John Bian, Ph.D., a health services researcher, received his
Ph.D. in Health Policy and Administration from the University of
North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He is experienced with study designs
and analyses in outcomes research, specializing in longitudinal
data analysis techniques with retrospective data. One of his current
research interests is to understand factors associated with proliferation
of free-standing ambulatory surgery centers in the past 20 years
and subsequent impacts of this increase on utilization and health
outcomes. Prior to his coming to UAB, he had worked five years at
the Duke Center for Clinical Health Policy Research. His main responsibility
included cost-effectiveness analysis to evaluate competing treatment
strategies for stroke care and prevention. Secondary data sources
including both Medicare and non-Medicare claims data were used for
estimating the treatment effectiveness and costs in these analyses.
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Janet M. Bronstein, M.A., Ph.D., is Associate Professor in the Department
of Health Care Organization and Policy in the School of Public Health
and a Scholar in the Lister Hill Center for Health Policy at the
University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB). She holds secondary appointments
in the Department of Sociology and the Department of Political Science
at UAB. Her doctorate is in Applied Medical Anthropology. She has
been on the faculty of UAB since 1988 and teaches Health Policy
and Ethical and Social Issues in Public Health. Dr. Bronstein's
research interests primarily focus on health care services for the
low-income population. She has conducted several studies of maternity
services, and was coinvestigator on the Agency for Health Care Policy
and Research Patient Outcome Research Team (PORT) on Low Birthweight
in Minority and High Risk Women. She has also studied access, cost
and quality of care in the pediatric and the general population
covered by Medicaid programs. Dr. Bronstein received her PhD from
University of Kentucky and her BA from Brandeis University
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Kathleen Brown, Ph.D., R.N., is Professor in the School of Nursing and
Investigator in the AHRQ funded UAB Center for Education and Research
on Therapeutics (CERTs) of Musculoskeletal Disorders. She is also
Deputy Director of the National Institute on Occupational Safety
and Health (NIOSH) funded Deep South Center for Occupational Safety
and Health, Director of the occupational health nursing program,
and a faculty member in the UAB Arthritis and Musculoskeletal Diseases
Center. Dr. Brown is Chair of the Health Status and Function focus
area in the School of Nursing Ph.D. program and is a professor in
the master's program study option in Outcomes Measurement and Health
Care Quality Improvement. Dr. Brown served as a member of the Agency
for Health Care Policy and Research (AHCPR) Guidelines Panel on
Low Back Dysfunction and has received NIH funding for back injury
prevention clinical trial research. She is a site visitor/evaluator
for NIOSH multidisciplinary Education and Research programs, and
has served on an Agency for Healthcare Quality and Research panels
on Worker Initiatives and on the State of the Science in Musculoskeletal
Diseases Research. In addition, Dr. Brown is clinic director of
the City of Birmingham Occupational Health Clinic and co-P.I. of
the City of Birmingham Good Health Program. Dr. Brown received her
Master of Science in Nursing from Boston University and a Ph.D.
in Nursing from Case Western Reserve University.
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Jeffrey Burkhardt, Ph.D., is
Assistant Professor for Healthcare Finance at the University of
Alabama at Birmingham (UAB). He has a Ph.D. in Health Services Organization
and Policy, with a finance specialty, and a Master’s degree
in Applied Economics, both from the University of Michigan, and
a Master’s degree in Management from Troy State University.
Current research interests include cost analysis of healthcare services,
process modeling and process simulation, and pay for performance.
In addition to his educational and research background in healthcare,
Dr. Burkhardt has several years of applied healthcare experience,
having worked for six years in hospitals as a radiology department
director and as an assistant hospital administrator, as well as
three years of health insurance sales. Before joining the UAB faculty,
his work included studies of the employment market for radiologists,
utilization of healthcare services, economic cost comparisons of
cancer detection and treatment procedures, evaluation of practice
expenses for physician practices, and workload studies of radiology
practices. Dr. Burkhardt is a Fellow in the Healthcare Financial
Management Association (HFMA), Vice President of the Alabama chapter
of HFMA, and a member of the International Society for Research
in Healthcare Financial Management.
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Robert M. Centor, M.D., is Professor in the Department of Medicine
and Director of the Division of General Internal Medicine, School
of Medicine at the University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB). He
is also a Scholar in the Lister Hill Center for Health Policy at
UAB. Dr. Centor's research focuses on cost-effectiveness of medical
care and the statistical methodology of medical decision making.
He has served as President for the Society for Medical Decision
Making, Associate Editor for the Society's journal Medical Decision
Making and received the Society's Award for Distinguished Service
in 1997. He has also served on the American College of Physicians
Medical Informatics Committee and on Scientific Program Committees
for the following professional societies: American College of Physicians,
Society for Medical Decision Making, American Federation for Clinical
Research, Society of General Internal Medicine, Association of Program
Directors in Internal Medicine. Dr. Centor received his medical
degree from the Medical College of Virginia, and completed his residency
in Internal Medicine also at Medical College of Virginia. He completed
a Fellowship in Nephrology at the University of Texas Health Sciences
Center.
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Shelia Cotten, Ph.D.,
is Associate Professor in the Department of Sociology, School of
Social and Behavioral Sciences at the University of Alabama at Birmingham
(UAB). She is also the Associate director for the Center for Social
Medicine. Her areas of specialization include medical sociology,
social psychology, and research methodology. Her research focuses
on the social impacts of information and communication technologies
(ICTs) in relation to psychosocial resources and health. Dr. Cotten
also studies suffering among older adults and how this differes
from depression and sadness. She is also experienced in the design
and implementation of surveys across a range of modes of administration
and populations.
Dr. Cotten completed her undergraduate work at Wake Forest University and her M.S. and
Ph.D. degrees at North Carolina State University. She went on to
complete a post doctoral fellowship in Health Administration. Prior
to joining the faculty at UAB, Dr. Cotten was a faculty member at
the University of Maryland, Baltimore County (UMBC).
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Marilyn C. Doss, M.A., is Director of Patient/Staff Satisfaction Studies
for the University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB) Health System.
She directs and oversees all aspects of the satisfaction monitoring
systems, including surveying inpatients, outpatients, hospital staff
and attending physicians, analyzing, reporting and communicating
the results, and following up to encourage use of results for quality
improvement. Ms. Doss served on the University Health System Consortium
Patient Satisfaction Steering Committee as member and Chair, the
Alabama Hospital Association Patient Satisfaction Survey Task Force,
and the Alabama Health Care Council Patient Satisfaction Task Force.
Past positions at the University of Alabama at Birmingham were with
the Comprehensive Cancer Center, during which time Ms. Doss served
on several cancer related community boards, as well as authored
or co-authored several papers related to the psychosocial aspects
of cancer. She is currently Vice-Chairman of UABÕs Institutional
Review Board. She has made major presentations on her work in patient
satisfaction at regional and national professional meetings, to
consumer groups, and to various health provider organizations across
the country. She received her B.S. from the niversity of Wisconsin,
Madison, and her M.A. from the University of Alabama at Birmingham.
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Carlos Estrada, M.D., MS,
is Associate Professor of Medicine at the University of Alabama
School of Medicine at Birmingham and staff physician at the Birmingham
Veterans Administration Medical Center (VAMC). He serves as Assistant
Division director of General Internal Medicine at the University
of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB) and is the Associate Director for
the Veterans Administration National Quality Scholar Fellowship
Program (VAQS), Birmingham VAMC.
Dr. Estrada's research interests are in low-literacy, cultural competency, decision
sciences, and evidence-based medicine. He has conducted research
on low-literacy among elderly patients receiving anticoagulants,
developed low-literacy brochures, and implemented a nurse-led anticoagulation
management service. He has also assessed the impact of health literacy
on patients with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection
and determined the readability of patient information brochures
offered to them. Dr. Estrada has authored or co-authored over 35
articles published in peer-reviewed journals. Dr. Estrada is a Deputy
Editor for The Journal of General Internal Medicine and
Editor for CME Question Development for the American College
of Physicians - Scientific American. He has served as President
of the southern Society of General Internal Medicine.
Dr. Estrada received his medical degree from Cayetano Heredia University in
Lima,Peru. He then completed his internship, residency in internal
medicine, and Chief Medical Residency at Henry ford Hospital. Dr.
Estrada received a Master of Science degree in Clinical Research
Design and Statistical Analysis at the University of Michigan School
of Public Health in Ann Arbor.
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Rachel Fry, Ph.D., is a Postdoctoral Scholar in the Division of
Preventive Medicine at the University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB).
Dr. Fry received her doctorate in Clinical Psychology from the University
of Alabama and her clinical psychology internship at UAB.
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Peter M. Ginter, Ph.D., is Professor and Chair of the Department of
Health Care Organization and Policy in the School of Public Health
and Professor of Management in the Graduate School of Management
at the University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB). He is active in
research in strategic management and health care organization. He
is the author or co-author of eleven books including Cases in Strategic
Marketing (1989) and Cases in Strategic Management and Business
Policy (1990). He is also co-author of Strategic Management of Health
Care Organizations, 3rd ed. (1998) with Duncan and Swayne, The Physician
Strategist (1996) with Duncan and Swayne, and Strategic Issues in
Health Care Management (1992) with Duncan and Swayne. He is also
co-editor (with Duncan and Swayne) of The Handbook of Health Care
Management (1998). Pete has published more than 100 articles, papers,
and cases in management journals. His articles, for example, have
appeared in the California Management Review, Academy of Management
Review, Academy of Management Executive, Business Horizons, Journal
of Management Studies, Long Range Planning, Management International
Review, Journal of Systems Management, Managerial Planning, Long
Range Planning, Public Health Reports, and Public Productivity and
Management Review and others. Dr. Ginter received his Ph.D. from
the University of North Texas.
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Gerald Glandon, Ph.D., is Professor and Chair of the Department
of Health Services Administration at the University of Alabama at
Birmingham (UAB). Dr. Glandon has had a distinguished career in
research, health administration education, and academic administration.
His primary research interests have been technology evaluation (cost-effectiveness
of new drug therapies, assessing information technologies, etc.),
the economic aspects of aging and aging markets, patient and physician
satisfaction assessment and assessment of organizational performance.
He has received numerous grants as principle investigator and co-principle
investigator including funding from the National Institute on Aging,
Searle Inc., Bureau of Health Professions, Illinois Hospital Association,
John A. Hartford Foundation and Ortho-Biotech, Inc. He also has
extensive publications in such journals as Journal of the American
Medical Association, Journal of Gerontology: Social Sciences, Medical
Care, Hospital and Health Services Administration, and Health Services
Research as well as numerous books and book chapters. Over the years,
Dr. Glandon has kept his research and practice skills current by
engaging in extensive consulting with academic health centers, external
agencies and organizations. These activities have included process
improvement, employee satisfaction assessment and reporting, litigation
support in health care antitrust and wrongful death cases and nursing
organization, quality and cost studies. In recent years he has worked
extensively in international health with engagements in Albania,
Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan, Yemen and Saudi Arabia. He
has both developed and delivered management education in these countries
and provided health care strategic analysis to Ministries of Health
and to individual hospitals. Prior to coming to UAB, he had been
Program Director of the Department of Health Systems Management
at Rush-Presbyterian-St. Luke’s Medical Center in Chicago.
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S. Robert Hernandez, Dr.P.H., is Professor of Health Services Administration
in the School of Health Related Professions at the University of
Alabama at Birmingham (UAB). Dr. Hernandez has worked in the health
services administration field for more than twenty-five years and
has been a faculty member of the Department of Health Services Administration
since completing his doctorate. Dr. Hernandez has served as Chair
of the Health Care Administration Division of the Academy of Management.
He is a member of the Regent's Advisory Council for the American
College of Healthcare Executives in Alabama. He has served on the
editorial boards of Health Care Management Review, Medical Care
Review, Health Services Management Research, and Alabama Journal
of Medical Sciences. His research has focused on strategic issues
in the health Services industry. He also has studied organizational
innovation and change, hospital closure, organizational performance,
human resource management, and physician behavior in health care
organizations. He has been consultant to many health Services organization
on these and other issues. His applied research has been honored
by the American Sociological Association and the Academy of Management.
He was appointed to the Accrediting Commission for Education in
Health Services Administration in 1998. Dr. Hernandez is a graduate
of the Masters of Science in Hospital Administration Program at
UAB, and received his doctorate from the University of North Carolina
at Chapel Hill.
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Gustavo R. Heudebert, M.D., is Associate Professor in the Department
of Medicine, Division of General Internal Medicine, School of Medicine,
and a Scholar in the Lister Hill Center for Health Policy at the
University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB). Dr. Heudebert's research
focuses on cost-effectiveness analysis, outcomes research and medical
education. Prior to coming to UAB he was an Assistant Professor
of Medicine at UT Southwestern Medical School. Dr. Heudebert received
his medical degree from the Universidad eruana Cayetano. He completed
his residency at Henry Ford Hospital, Detroit Michigan and completed
his fellowship in General Internal Medicine at the Medical College
of Wisconsin.
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Thomas K. Houston, M.D., M.P.H., is an Assistant Professor
of Medicine in the UAB Division of General Internal Medicine and
Director of the Health Informatics Unit for the UAB Center for Outcomes
and Effectiveness Research and Education (COERE).
Dr. Houston completed a NRSA fellowship
at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine where he focused on health behavior,
health communication, and informatics. Dr. Houston is currently
chair of the Consumer Health Informatics Working Group of the American
Medical Informatics Association. His past research includes the
use of the Internet to screen for depression and Physician-Patient
email communication. Dr. Houston is currently co-PI on an AHRQ-funded
research project entitled "Improving Primary Care Patient Safety
with Handheld DSS" and is co-PI on a NCI-funded research project
entitled "Smoking Cessation Coach: An Internet Tailoring Program."
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Meredith Kilgore, Ph.D., holds degrees in Nursing and Political
Science from the University of Hawaii, an MSPH from the UAB School
of Public Health, and a Ph.D. in Policy Analysis from the RAND Graduate
School. He has over fifteen years of experience in critical care
nursing and has been involved in health services research for several
years. Dr. Kilgore's research projects have included cost-effectiveness
studies relating to hospital organization, clinical information
systems, technology assessment, cancer treatment, and the design
of clinical trials. His current projects include studies on medical
malpractice insurance, effects of reimbursement regimes on home
health services, quality assessment for cardio-vascular disease,
and hospital infection control.
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Russell Kirby, Ph.D., M.S., F.A.C.E., is Professor and Vice Chair in the Department
of Maternal and Child Health in the School of Public Health at the
University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB).
Dr. Kirby joined the UAB School of Public Health as professor of Maternal and Child
Health in 2002. He is a perinatal and pedicatric epidemiologist
trained in the social sciences, with a doctorate in human geography
(Wisconsin, 1981) and MS in preventive medicine-epidemiology (Wisconsin,
1991). He was a health statistician for the states of Wisconsin
and Arkansas (1981-1991), and on the faculties of the Department
of Pediatrics, University opf Arkansas for Medical Sciences, and
Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Milwaukee Clinical Campus,
University of Wisconsin Medical School. He was elected Fellow in
the American College of Epidemiology in 1996.
Dr. Kirby's research interests focus in three major areas. First, he has conducted
numerous studies examining the public health implications of health
policies and programs, with special reference to perinatal and maternal/child
health. Second, he has developed a concept of population health
informatics, and begun to explore its ramifications as a platform
for population health practice, focusing on database design, quality
of databases and data elements in existing population-based information
systems, and the role of geographic information systems - all also
with special reference to maternal and child health. Public health
surveillance activities figure prominently in the conceptual framework
for population health informatics. Third, he has developed a broad
reputation as a research collaborator, in genetics, clinical research,
study design and analysis, resulting in numerous projects, grants,
abstracts, and peer-reviewed articles.
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Joshua C. Klapow, Ph.D., Director of the Health Outcomes Assessment
Unit, and Associate Professor in the Department of Psychology (Social
and Behavioral Sciences), the Division of General Internal Medicine
(School of Medicine), and the Department of Health Care Organization
and Policy (School of Public Health) at the University of Alabama
at Birmingham (UAB). Dr. Klapow teaches courses in health outcomes
evaluation and psychometric measurement. His research focuses on
the evaluation of health status and quality of life in chronic illness,
including the use of multivariate statistical modeling to evaluate
change in health status. He has an extensive background in psychometric
theory, test design and construction, and patient based assessments
of health and functional well-being. Dr. Klapow's work has examined
the methodology of functional and statistical evaluations of health
status and the role of psychosocial and behavioral factors in determining
health outcomes. Dr. Klapow received his Ph.D. in clinical psychology
from the University of California, San Diego, where he also completed
a post- doctoral fellowship in Geriatric Health Services Research.
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Mark Litaker, Ph.D., is
Director of Biostatistics for the UAB School of Dentistry and is
an Associate Professor in the Department of Diagnostic Sciences,
with a secondary appointment in the Division of Preventive Medicine
of the UAB School of Medicine. Current research interests include
evaluation of and adjustment for sample selection bias in longitudinal
studies of treatment effects, and statistical models for longitudinal
studies of categorical outcomes. Prior to coming to UAB, for nearly
15 years he provided support for a wide variety of research projects
at the Medical College of Georgia.
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Linda C. Lucas, Ph.D., is Professor and Dean at the School of Engineering
at the University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB). Dr. Lucas was
formerly Chair in the Department of Biomedical Engineering (School
of Engineering). For the past 15 years, Dr. Lucas' research goal
has been to investigate the chemical and physical properties of
biomaterials, and to develop a better understanding of the interaction
of these materials with the biological environment. In 1991, she
received the National Science Foundations Award for Women Scientists
and Engineers. In 1996, she developed the concept for the UAB Biomedical
Implant Center. This Center brings together researchers from multiple
disciplines to work on problems associated with implants and devices.
Dr. Lucas directs this center. In addition to her extensive research
background and activities, Dr. Lucas is very dedicated to her teaching
and training activities and has served as research advisor to over
33 masters, doctoral, and post-doctoral students in the UAB School
of Engineering. Dr. Lucas is currently the President of the Biomedical
Engineering Society and has also served as the president of the
Society for Biomaterials, and Chair of the Scientific Review Committee
in IDREF (Implant Dentistry Research & Education Foundation).
In 1998 she was induced as a Fellow in the American Institute for
Medical and Biological Engineers and in 2000 she was inducted as
an International Fellow in the Society for Biomaterals. Dr. Lucas
sits on several scientific review boards and study sections, and
is on the editorial board of the Journal of Biomedical Materials
Research Implant Dentistry. She received her Ph.D. in Biomedical
Engineering from UAB and completed her Post Doctoral Fellowship
at the Nordisk Institute for Odontologisk Materials Proving, Oslo,
Norway.
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David Macrina, Ph.D., is Chair of the Department of Human Studies in the
UAB School of Education. He is also Director of the Ph.D. Program in Health
Education and Health Promotion in the School of Education and has additional
appointments in the UAB School of Public Health, Department of Health Behavior.
For his work facilitating health education in schools and communities,
Dr. Macrina was awarded the Outstanding Health Education Professional of
the Year Award in a university setting by the National Association for
the Advancement of Health Education. He serves on the editorial board of
the American Journal of Health Studies. Dr. Macrina has been involved in
health education research and training activities funded by numerous sources
including the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, U.S. Department
of Education, Drug Free and Safe Schools and the Alabama State Department
of Education. Prior to his work in higher education, Dr. Macrina served
as an education director with the New York State Department of Health and
the British Columbia Ministry of Health. He currently serves as the chair
of the Joint Committee on Quality of Life joint initiatives (including
health education and prevention) for the Birmingham School System and UAB.
He is also a member of the Birmingham City Schools Drug Free Schools Policy
Advisory Committee. Dr. Macrina received his Ph.D. from the University
of Illinois and public health graduate training from the University of
Massachusetts at Amherst.
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Wendy Marsh-Tootle, O.D., is Associate Professor in the Department of
Optometry at the University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB) where she
directs the Pediatric Optometry Service and teaches at the post-graduate
level. Dr. Marsh-Tootle is an experienced vision researcher with expertise
in clinical trials, vision screening, and refractive error development.
She is principal investigator of the Correction of Myopia Evaluation
Trial (COMET) which is a longitudinal study following myopia development
in children receiving optical treatments. She is also principal investigator
of another longitudinal study, Factors in Nearsight Development (FIND),
which seeks to identify children at risk for myopia progression. Dr.
Marsh-Tootle received her Optometry degree from the University of
Alabama at Birmingham and completed her residency in hospital-based
Optometry at the Veteran's Administration Health Center in Tuscaloosa,
AL. In addition to her clinical trianing, Dr. Marsh-Tootle received
a Masters of Science in Physiological Optics at the University of
Alabama.
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Stephen T. Mennemeyer, Ph.D., is Associate Professor in the Department
of Health Care Organization and Policy in the School of Public Health
and a Scholar in the Lister Hill Center for Health Policy at the
University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB). Dr. Mennemeyer's research
focuses on such issues as the cost-effectiveness of health care
interventions, the quality of clinical laboratory testing and its
effects on patient care, and consumer responses to information about
hospital quality. He has previously worked for Abt Associates, Inc.
as a senior economist and project director, for the Health Systems
Agency of Western New York as an economist, and for the School of
Pharmacy at the State University of New York at Buffalo as Assistant
Professor. Dr. Mennemeyer holds a Ph.D. in Economics from the State
University of New York at Buffalo.
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Jacqueline Moss, Ph.D., R.N., is Assistant Professor in the School of Nursing at
the University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB). Dr. Moss has a wide
range of experience in adult critical care practice, nursing education,
and research. She has a particular interest in healthcare informatics
and earned a doctorate in nursing informatics. Dr. Moss has been
involved in multiple projects designed to implement new information
and communication technologies for use in healthcare practice and
education. Prior to joining UAB in 2002, Dr. Moss held an appointment
with the National Study Center for Trauma at the University of Maryland
in the Human Factors and Telemedicine Research Group. Research conducted
by Dr. Moss includes the determination of information needs for
trauma and operating room coordination and the use of standardized
terminologies in health outcomes management. Dr. Moss received her
Ph.D. from the University of Maryland, Baltimore
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F. Orthner, Ph.D., FACMI, is Professor of
Health Informatics, in the Department of Health Services Administration
in the School of Health Professions at the University of Alabama
at Birmingham (UAB). He is also a Professor in the Department of
Computer and Information Sciences in the School of Natural Sciences
and Mathematics at UAB. Through May 2006, he directed the Master
of Science in Health Informatics program, as well. Dr. Orthner is
a Senior Scientist with the COERE, CECDP (Center for Emergency Care
and disaster Preparedness), and CMBD (Center for Metabolic Bone
Disease), and a member of the Advisory Committee for the Informatics
CORE of the UAB General Clinical Research Center (GCRC) and the
Advisory Committee for the UAB Vice President for IT at the UAB
Office of the President.
Dr. Orthner teaches graduate-level
courses in health and medical informatics. His research interests
are in the domain of health or medical informatics, specifically,
the communications infrastructure supporting the integration of
clinical and administrative information and the automation of administrative
processes to improve quality of care. The current focus of his research
is in the domain of pre-hospital emergency medicine and disaster
management.
Dr. Orthner is a Founding Member of
the AMIA (American Medical Informatics Association) and a member
of its initial Board of Directors. He is also a Founding Fellow
of the American College of Medical Informatics (ACMI), elected in
1984. Dr. Orthner received his Ph.D. degree in Biomedical Engineering
from the University of Pennsylvania and a Dipl. Ing (M.S.) degree
in electronic communications from the Technical University in Munich,
Germany.
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Sharina D. Person, Ph.D., Director of the Data Management Unit, is Assistant
Professor in the Division of Preventive Medicine in the School of Medicine.
She serves as biostatistician for the UAB COERE and the UAB Center for
Education of Therapeutics (CERTs) of Musculoskeletal Diseases. Dr. Person
also holds a teaching appointment in the Department of Biostatistics in
the School of Public Health. She has expertise in statistical design and
methodology and the application of various statistical modeling techniques
to outcomes and effectiveness research, health services research, and quality
of care research, and currently serves as the lead biostatistician on several
large federally funded research grants for the COERE and other UAB Centers.
Dr. Person received her Ph.D. in biostatistics from the University of Alabama
at Birmingham, School of Public Health.
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Maria Pisu, Ph.D., is a faculty member of the Department of
Health Services Administration of the University of Alabama at Birmingham
(UAB) with a secondary appointment in the Department of Preventive
Medicine. She obtained her Ph.D. in Economics from Pennsylvania
State University, and worked for two years at the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention (CDC) as a Prevention Effectiveness Fellow.
At the CDC, she received training in economic methods for the evaluation
of health interventions. She then joined the University of Alabama
at Birmingham as a Post-doctoral Fellow in the Center for Outcomes
and Effectiveness Research and Education (COERE). Examples of her
previous work consist of modeling the cost-effectiveness of hepatitis
B accination of prison inmates, and analyzing health care utilization
data from a randomized control trial of influenza vaccination of
day-care children. Currently, she is working on an analysis of the
variation in charges and reimbursements for endoscopic procedures
used for colorectal cancer screening, on a study of the cost of
adverse events associated with using glucocorticoids in the treatment
of rheumatoid arthritis, and on evaluating an intervention targeted
at caregivers of Alzheimer and Parkinson disease patients, and one
targeted at physicians of surviving myocardial infarction patients.
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Michelle Robinson, DMD, MA,
is Associate Professor in Diagnostic Sciences and Director of Dental
Informatics at the UAB School of Dentistry. Her dental career has
included private practice, teaching, consulting, outreach programs,
and working with computer and communications technologies. In her
current role, Dr. Robinson is completing her third clinical systems
implementation and online curriculum for a professional school.
Dr. Robinson is a graduate of the University of Medicine and Dentistry
of New Jersey and has a Master's degree in Medical Informatics from
Columbia University in New York.
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David L. Roth, Ph.D., is Associate Professor in the Department of
Psychology at the School of Social and Behavioral Sciences at the
University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB). He has extensive experience
in the multivariate statistical analysis of outcome data from a
variety of different academic disciplines and perspectives. He is
a funded co-investigator on five different multidisciplinary extramural
research grants. He also consults with investigators from Georgetown
University and from the University of Alabama on health-related
research projects. He has served as a member of the Behavioral Medicine
Study Section of NIH. Dr. Roth has particular expertise in structural
equation modeling, including the analysis of mediating effects and
the extraction of latent variables from multiple observed measures.
His own research has examined the psychological and physiological
benefits of physical exercise for health promotion, particularly
among older adults. Dr. Roth received his Ph.D. in Psychology from
the University of Kansas.
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Kenneth Saag, M.D., M.Sc., is currently an Associate Professor of Medicine in
the Division of Clinical Immunology and Rheumatology and Director
of the Center for Education and Research on Therapeutics (CERTs)
for Musculoskeletal Disorders at the University of Alabama at Birmingham
(UAB). He obtained his medical degree and did his medical
residency and Chief Residency at Northwestern University in Chicago.
He then completed fellowship training and earned a Master of Science
degree in Epidemiology from the University of Iowa where he remained
on the faculty until moving to the UAB in 1998. Dr. Saag has
written extensively about the epidemiology and drug therapy in rheumatoid
arthritis and he also has a special interest in glucocorticoid-induced
osteoporosis. He is on the editorial board of Arthritis
Care and Research and serves as reviewer for numerous general
medical, health services, and rheumatology journals.
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Terrence Shaneyfelt, M.D., M.P.H., is Assistant Professor in the Department
of Medicine, Division of General Internal Medicine, School of Medicine
at the University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB). He has extensive
experience in the development and evaluation of clinical practice
guidelines. He also has experience in meta-analysis and survey development.
Dr. Shaneyfelt received his medical degree from Louisiana State School
of Medicine and is board certified in Internal Medicine. He received
a M.P.H. from the Harvard University School of Public Health.
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Bryce Sutton, Ph.D.,
is an Assistant Professor of Economics in the department of Finance,
Economics, and Quantitative Methods, in the School of Business at
the University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB). Dr. Sutton received
his Ph.D. in Economics at Saint Louis University.
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Jan Wallander, Ph.D., has an appointment as a Research Professor
of Psychology at the University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB).
He is also affiliated with the Center for the Advancement of Youth
Health. He has 25 years of work in developing behavioral measurement
methodologies in pediatric populations. His research expertise includes
the measurement of quality of life, especially in children and adolescents
with chronic illness or disability, and identification of risk and
protective factors associated with differences in quality of life.
This work has been funded by NIH and CDC. Among 100-plus publications
are Koot, H.M., & Wallander, J.L. (2001). Quality of life
in children and adolescents: Concepts, methods, and findings.
London, United Kingdom: Harwood Academic Publishers, and Frank,
R., Baum, A., Wallander, J.L. (2004). Models and perspectives
in health care psychology. Washington, DC. American Psychological
Association. Dr. Wallander received a Ph.D. in Clinical Psychology
from Purdue University. He completed his internship at Brown University
and a fellowship in Pediatric Psychology at the University of North
Carolina at Chapel Hill. Dr. Wallander is currently Vice President
at Sociometrics Corp., Los Altos, CA.
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>O. Dale Williams, Ph.D., is Professor of Biostatistics in the School
of Public Health and Director of the CARDIA Coordinating Center in
the Division of Preventive Medicine in the Department of Medicine
at the University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB). He has extensive
Experience in national and international collaborative studies and
clinical trials, and in the general field of health promotion and
disease prevention. He served as the founding Director of the Center
for Health Promotion and Disease Prevention at the University of North
Carolina and helped to create the Center for Health Promotion at UAB.
Most of his own research focuses on some aspect of the epidemiology
and prevention of cardiovascular disease. Dr. Williams received a
Ph.D. in Biostatistics in 1971 from the University of North Carolina.
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Feliciano
Yu, M.D., MHI, MSPH, is
Assistant Professor in the Department of Pediatrics, Division of
Emergency Medicine at the University of Alabama at Birmingham's
(UAB's) School of Medicine. Dr. Yu is a member of the Center for
Health Outcomes and Effectiveness Research and Education's (COERE's)
Health Informatics Unit. He completed a postdoctoral fellowship
in UAB's Outcomes and Health Services Research Training Program
in 2005. His main research interest is in the design of clinical
information systems and how they impact the quality of health care
delivery. He is also a medical informatisist at the Children's Hospital
of Alabama. Dr. Yu acts as the liaison between physicians and the
information technology staff, as well as provides expert opinion
on various clinical information technology implementations at Children's
Health System. He also practices pediatric urgent care medicine
at the Children's After Hours Clinic.
Dr. Yu received
his medical degree from the University of East RMMC College of Medicine
(Phillipines). He finished his pediatric residency at the Children's
Hospital of Wisconsin (Medical College of Milwaukee, Wisconsin).
After residency, he practiced primary care pedicatrics briefly and
then pursued his interests in medical informatics at UAB. He received
both a Masters of Science in Health Informatics and a Masters in
Public Health from UAB.
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