Lynne C. Huffman, MD

Lynne C. Huffman, MD

  • Associate Professor of Pediatrics
  • Stanford Health Policy Associate

Division of Neonatal and Developmental Medicine, Developmental-Behavioral Pediatrics Section
MSOB Building, 1265 Welch Road X109
Stanford, CA 94305

(650) 736-4744 (voice)
(650) 688-0206 (fax)

Biography

Lynne C. Huffman, MD, is a developmental-behavioral pediatrician (board certified, 2002) and Associate Professor of Pediatrics at Stanford School of Medicine. She received her MD from George Washington University (1981) and completed her pediatric residency training at the Children’s National Medical Center (Washington, D.C., 1984). Her subspecialty training in developmental-behavioral pediatrics was completed at UCSF (1986), with an NIH research post-doctoral fellowship in child development (1991).

In her faculty role at Stanford, she serves as Associate Program Director for the Developmental-Behavioral Pediatrics (DBP) Fellowship Program and directs the Pediatrics Residency DBP rotation. Her clinical responsibilities include High-risk Infant Follow-up and Young Child Program.  Current research activities concentrate on (1) medical education research – training subspecialists in shared decision-making; (2) the early identification and treatment of developmental and behavioral concerns, particularly in children with special health care needs; and, (3) community-based behavioral health/educational program evaluation and outcomes measurement.

publications

Journal Articles
June 2010

Variation in Specialty Care Hospitalization for Children With Chronic Conditions in California

Author(s)
cover link Variation in Specialty Care Hospitalization for Children With Chronic Conditions in California
Journal Articles
February 2010

Impact of Managed Care on Publicly Insured Children with Special Health Care Needs

Author(s)
cover link Impact of Managed Care on Publicly Insured Children with Special Health Care Needs
Journal Articles
June 2009

Children with Special Health Care Needs: How Immigrant Status is Related to Health Care Access, Health Care Utilization, and Health Status

Author(s)
cover link Children with Special Health Care Needs: How Immigrant Status is Related to Health Care Access, Health Care Utilization, and Health Status