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Community & Preventive Medicine Research lecture

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Major Research Areas

Gerontology and Geriatrics

  • Deborah Ossip-Klein
    Behavioral medicine, health impact of lifestyle change with particular focus on cigarette smoking, obesity, aging, child/adolescent outcomes measurement, and community intervention.

  • Sarah Trafton
    My interest in Aging issues include 1) legal and regulatory issues affecting health care access and service delivery, and 2) design and regulation of long-term care services and financing, especially for people with Alzheimer's disease and related dementias.

  • Molly McNulty
    Public policy and child health, access to care, Medicaid, gender equity, advocacy

  • William Barker
    Epidemiology and preventive aspects of influenza, stroke, hip fracture, congestive heart failure in older populations; Health services organization and professional development in geriatric medicine; Preventive medicine curriculum development.

  • Dana Mukamel
    My research interests include aging and long-term care, provision of high quality cost effective care and the effect of markets and government policies on it. Recent publications include:

    Mukamel DB, Bajorska A, Temkin-Greener H. Health care services utilization at the end of life in PACE - a managed care program integrating acute and long-term care. Submitted for publication 2002.

    Mukamel DB, Spector WD. The Competitive Nature of the Nursing Home Industry: Price Mark Ups and Elasticities. Applied Economics 2002;34(4):413-420.

    Mukamel DB. Risk-adjusted outcome measures and quality of care in nursing homes. Medical Care 1997;35:367-385.

    Mukamel DB, Chou C, Zimmer JG, Rothenberg B. The Effect of Accurate Patient Screeningon the Cost-Effectiveness of Case Management Programs. The Gerontologist 1997;37:777-784.

    Mukamel DB, Temkin-Greener H, Clark M. Stability of Disability Among PACE Enrollees: Financial and Programmatic Implications. Health Care Financing Review 1998;19(3):83-100.

  • Bruce Friedman
    Since 1974, all of Dr. Friedman's work-related positions have exclusively focused on or had a major focus on the aged, especially the chronically ill, functionally impaired elderly. He has worked for the New York State Department of Health as a surveyor of nursing homes, as a strategic planner on a variety of activities related to the chronically ill and aged at the healthcare system, hospital, and nursing home level, in a variety of roles on several Medicare demonstration projects (ACCESS:Medicare, the Medicare Alzheimer's Disease Demonstration, and, currently, the Medicare Primary and Consumer-Directed Care Demonstration), and as a researcher examining case management, geriatric practice in Medicare health maintenance organizations, variations in Medicare spending across the states, and differences in Medicare services utilization between a Social Health Maintenance Organization (Social HMO) and a Medicare risk HMO. Currently, through his involvement in the Medicare Primary and Consumer-Directed Care Demonstration, Dr. Friedman has been investigating the impact on the health, functional status, and health services use and expenditures of functionally impaired elderly persons of the following: (1) a Health Promotion Nurse intervention, (2) vouchers paying for additional services not normally covered by Medicare, and (3) a combination of the two interventions. Recently, he received a 5-year Mentored Research Scientist Career Development Award from the National Institute of Mental Health to study the relationship between depression and function and their impacts on healthcare service use and costs for older persons.

  • Scott McIntosh
    Self-help interventions for smoking cessation and behavioral change with various populations.

  • Helena Temkin-Greener
    Health services research focusing on organization, financing, and delivery of care for the elderly; development of risk-adjusted payment models, and outcomes research.

  • James Zimmer
    Health services research on aging and long term care.