The Foundation’s Medical Editors
are an essential part of the organization’s mission and objectives.
This group of highly respected medical professionals marshals the
scientific evidence for multiple educational efforts: videos, web
based programs, and print materials. Medical Editors have content
responsibilities across multiple decisions within a condition or
multiple conditions. They are extensively involved in program development
from start to finish. They are involved in gathering evidence, reviewing
the script, graphics, and data. Medical Editors also work with outside
expert reviewers, called Clinical Advisors, and the production teams
at Health Dialog, to produce the Shared Decision-Making programs
and review them on a regular basis.
David
Arterburn, MD, MPH is Assistant Investigator at the
Center for Health Studies at Group Health Cooperative in Seattle,
Washington. Dr. Arterburn received his MD from the University of
Kentucky in 1997 and completed his Internal Medicine residency and
chief residency at the University of Texas Health Science Center
at San Antonio in 2001. In 2003, he completed a Health Services
Research and Development Fellowship at the VA Puget Sound in Seattle
and received his MPH in Health Services at the University of Washington.
Dr. Arterburn’s work has focused on the area of obesity health
services research, with expertise in the clinical effectiveness
of obesity interventions and systematic reviews. He has recently
published articles on the cost of obesity, obesity pharmacotherapy,
bariatric surgery, health-related quality of life assessment, and
the health outcomes of obesity in the elderly. He also currently
serves as a medical editor for the Foundation for Informed Medical
Decision Making, and is working with the Foundation to develop shared
decision making tools in the area of weight management.
Steven
J. Atlas, MD, MPH is an Associate Physician in General
Medicine and Associate Director of primary care quality improvement
at Massachusetts General Hospital, and is an Assistant Professor
of Medicine at Harvard Medical School. His research focuses on improving
the quality of care for patients with low back disorders and respiratory
infections. He is a National Institutes of Health funded investigator
studying work-related low back pain and ways to improve patient
care by better linking patients and doctors. For patients with sinus
infections, he developed a survey instrument to measure the severity
of symptoms and their impact.
Michael
J. Barry, MD is Chief of the General Medicine Unit
at Massachusetts General Hospital and Professor of Medicine at Harvard
Medical School. Dr. Barry has been President of the Society for
Medical Decision-Making (SMDM) and the Society of General Internal
Medicine. He was the PI of the Prostate PORT-II. He is currently
PI of a project comparing screening and treatment intensity and
prostate cancer mortality in the Connecticut and Seattle SEER areas.
He heads the Endpoints Committee for the Prostate cancer Intervention
Versus Observation Trial (PIVOT). His research interests include
the evaluation and treatment of prostate disease, health status
measurement, technology assessment, and the use of decision aids
to facilitate patients’ participation in decision-making.
Michael Bierer MD, MPH is an Assistant Professor
of Medicine at Harvard Medical School and Associate Physician at
Massachusetts General Hospital where he has been on staff since
1988. He currently has an active primary-care clinic in internal
medicine at the hospital, and is responsible for resident education
related to the clinical management of drug and alcohol problems.
He formerly ran the program for homeless patients at the hospital.
L. Ebony Boulware, MD, MPH
Assistant Professor
in the Department of Internal Medicine at the School of Medicine
of Johns Hopkins University. Dr. Boulware's major research interests
include chronic kidney disease epidemiology and prevention, eliminating
racial disparities in access to appropriate care for persons with
chronic kidney disease, and identifying barriers to the delivery
of appropriate care for persons with chronic kidney disease. Her
current research activities focus on identifying patient and physician
barriers to the receipt of guideline concordant care for patients
with chronic kidney disease, identifying patient, physician, and
population factors affecting the receipt of kidney transplantation,
and race and gender differences in attitudes toward organ donation.
Additional activities include investigating the relation of quality
of life indices to outcomes in chronic kidney disease and work identifying
the contribution of patient behavior to the progression and treatment
of chronic disease.
Karen
Carlson, MD is Director of Women’s Health Associates
at Massachusetts General Hospital, Assistant Professor in Medicine
and Deputy Director, Center of Excellence in Women’s Health
at Harvard Medical School. Her areas of interest include hysterectomy
and alternative treatments for nonmalignant gynecologic conditions,
ovarian cancer screening, and communication issues in the doctor-patient
relationship. She was the principal investigator of the Maine Women’s
Health Study, a study of hysterectomy outcomes in the United States.
She is co-editor of a medical textbook, Primary Care of Women, and
a comprehensive book on women’s health, The Harvard Guide
to Women’s Health.
Ralph
Gonzales, MD is Associate Professor of Medicine; Epidemiology
and Biostatistics at the University of California, San Francisco;
and serves as Associate Director of the UCSF Roadmap K12 Multidisciplinary
Clinical Research Career Development Program and Co-Director of
the UCSF School of Medicine Epidemiology/Evidence Based Medicine
course for medical students. Dr Gonzales conducts research on design
and implementation of multidimensional intervention strategies to
improve the management of acute respiratory tract infections in
adults, particularly with regard to reducing overuse of antibiotics.
He directed the development of the CDC-sponsored, multi-specialty
task force to develop Principles of Appropriate Antibiotic Use for
Acute Respiratory Tract Infections in Adults in 2001; and is co-PI
on the joint VA-AHRQ-funded Improving Antibiotic Use in Acute Care
Treatment (IMPAACT) Project—a national 16-site cluster-randomized
trial to test different intervention strategies to improve antibiotic
use in emergency departments. He also edits the annually updated
book “Current Practice Guidelines in Primary Care” (McGraw-Hill/Lange).
Ethan A. Halm, MD, MPH is
Associate Professor,
Associate Chief, Director of Research, Division of General Internal
Medicine Director, Masters of Science in Clinical Research Mount Sinai
School of Medicine.
Katherine E. Hartmann, MD, PhD is Deputy Director of
the Institute for Medicine and Public Health at Vanderbilt University
Medical Center where she also serves as Director of Womens
Health Research at Vanderbilt, and Vice Chair of Research in Obstetrics
and Gynecology. Dr. Hartmann is a reproductive and health care epidemiologist
who received her medical training as well as a masters degree
in science writing at the Johns Hopkins University. She completed
residency, Robert Wood Johnson Clinical Scholars fellowship, and
doctoral training in epidemiology at the University of North Carolina.
Dr. Hartmanns research spans topics from subclinical hypothyroidism
and cardiovascular disease, to risk factors for miscarriage and
preterm birth. Her methodological interests include evaluation of
diagnostic tests; measuring how patients and physicians use data
for decision-making; and large scale clinical-translational studies
of etiology and natural history of disease.
Richard
Hoffman, MD
Interim Director, Cancer Prevention, University of New Mexico Cancer
Research and Treatment Center, and Professor of Medicine, University
of New Mexico, Albuquerque.
Jeffrey N. Katz, M.D., M.S.
Associate Professor of Medicine, Harvard Medical School; Director of Clinical Research, New England Baptist Bone and Joint Institute; Director, Robert Brigham Arthritis and Musculoskeletal Clinical Research Center, Director of Health Services Research, Multipurpose Arthritis and Musculoskeletal Diseases Center, Brigham and Women's Hospital.
Jean
S. Kutner, MD, MSPH is a tenured Associate Professor
of Medicine in the Division of General Internal Medicine at the
University of Colorado at Denver Health Sciences Center and is the
Head of the Division of General Internal Medicine. Following residency
in Internal Medicine at the University of California, San Francisco,
Dr. Kutner completed a National Research Service Award Primary Care
Fellowship and a Geriatrics Fellowship at the University of Colorado
Health Sciences Center. She has established and directs the Population-based
Palliative Care Research Network (PoPCRN), a research network of
organizations that provide hospice/palliative care. Dr. Kutner is
active in palliative/hospice care research, education and clinical
care locally and nationally. She is recipient of Robert Wood Johnson
Generalist Physician Faculty Scholars Program and Paul Beeson Physician
Faculty Scholars in Aging Research Awards, an R01 from the National
Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine, an R21 from the
National Cancer Institute and provides mentorship to students, residents
and faculty in end-of-life-related research. She directs the palliative
care consultation service at the University of Colorado Hospital.
Nationally, she is the Chair of the American Academy of Hospice
and Palliative Medicine College of Palliative Care and is a member
of the Board of Trustees of the American Board of Hospice and Palliative
Medicine.
Carol
M. Mangione, MD, MPH is a Professor in the Division
of General Internal Medicine and Health Services Research in the
Department of Medicine of the David Geffen School of Medicine at
UCLA. She is also a consultant in the RAND Health Program, and Director
of the NIA-funded UCLA/Drew Resource Center for Minority Aging Research
/ Center for Health Improvement of Minority Elderly. Additionally
she is a practicing general internist in the UCLA Medical Group’s
Internal Medicine Suites where she sees patients and teaches medical
residents. Dr. Mangione received her BS from the University of Michigan,
Ann Arbor, MD from the University of California, San Francisco,
and her MSPH from the Harvard School of Public Health, Boston. She
is Co-director of the UCLA Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Clinical
Scholars Program, and member of the National Diabetes Quality Improvement
Alliance Technical Expert Panel.
Mary McNaughton-Collins,
MD, MPH is on the faculty at Harvard Medical School
and has a clinical practice at Massachusetts General Hospital. She
has funding from the NIH to conduct research in prostate diseases.
Dr. McNaughton-Collins received a bachelor's degree in Spanish from
Holy Cross in 1987 and a medical degree from Dartmouth/Brown in
1991. She completed a medical residency at Boston University, followed
by a fellowship in general medicine at Massachusetts General Hospital.
She received a MPH degree from the Harvard School of Public Health.
Annette O'Connor, Ph.D., M.Sc.N.
Professor, Faculty of Health Sciences, School of Nursing and Faculty of Medicine, Department of Epidemiology and Community Health at the University of Ottawa; Senior Scientist, Clinical Epidemiology at the Ottawa Health Research Institute.
Michael
P. Pignone, MD, MPH is an Associate Professor of Medicine
in the Division of General Internal Medicine at University of North
Carolina - Chapel Hill, Associate Chief of the Division of General
Internal Medicine, and Director of the UNC Center for Excellence
in Chronic Illness Care. He received his medical degree and residency
training in primary care internal medicine from the University of
California- San Francisco. He then completed fellowship training
in clinical epidemiology and health services research through the
Robert Wood Johnson Clinical Scholars Program at UNC. Dr. Pignone’s
research is focused on chronic disease prevention and physician
– patient communication about risk in primary care settings.
His main areas of interest include heart disease prevention, colorectal
cancer screening, and disease management for common chronic illnesses
such as diabetes, depression, heart failure, and chronic pain.
Neil
Powe, MD, MPH is Director of the Welch Center for Prevention,
Epidemiology and Clinical Research at Johns Hopkins University and
a Professor in the Department of Internal Medicine of the School
of Medicine at Johns Hopkins University.
Karen
R. Sepucha, PhD is a Senior Scientist with the Health
Decision Research Unit at Massachusetts General Hospital and an
Instructor in Medicine at Harvard Medical School. Her research interests
focus on extending and refining normative and behavioral decision
making theories and their applications to medical decision making.
Dr. Sepucha has published several articles evaluating decision support
interventions and describing a conceptual framework for promoting
measurable improvements in decision quality. Her most recent work
is focused on developing and evaluating decision quality measures
that can be used to compare decision quality across populations
of patients.
John
W. Williams Jr., MD is Professor of Medicine and Psychiatry
at Duke University. He is co-Director for the MacArthur Initiative
on Depression in Primary Care, Scientific Editor of the NC Medical
Journal and a faculty member in the Center for Health Services Research
in Primary Care at the Durham VAMC. His research on the clinical
examination, depression recognition, and methods to implement effective
care models for depression have been published in major medical
journals such as JAMA, BMJ and Annals of Internal Medicine. Current
projects focus on the dissemination of successful care models for
depression, measuring depression quality of care, improving the
incorporation of evidence into clinical guidelines, and evaluating
screening strategies for cognitive impairment. Dr. Williams received
a Generalist Physician Faculty Scholar award from the Robert Wood
Johnson Foundation, and an Advanced Career Development Award from
the VA Health Services Research Program. Dr. Williams is board certified
in Internal Medicine and active in clinical practice and resident
physician education.
John
Wong, MD is Chief of the Division of Clinical Decision
Making, Informatics and Telemedicine in the Department of Medicine
at the Tufts-New England Medical Center Hospitals and the Tufts
University School of Medicine. He is a Past President of the Society
for Medical Decision Making and a Fellow of the American College
of Physicians. Dr. Wong received his medical degree from the University
of Chicago, Pritzker School of Medicine. He completed his postgraduate
training in internal medicine at the Tufts-New England Medical Center,
and Tufts University School of Medicine; where he received a National
Library of Medicine Medical Informatics fellowship in Clinical Decision
Making. His research has examined public health policy and individual
medical management issues using decision analysis to help patients,
physicians and policy makers choose among alternative tests, treatments
or policies.
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