Maria Polyakova

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Maria Polyakova, PhD

  • Associate Professor, Health Policy
  • MS in Health Policy Program Director

Encina Commons,
615 Crothers Way Room 182,
Stanford, California 94305-6006

(650) 498-7528 (voice)

Biography

Maria Polyakova, PhD, is Associate Professor of Health Policy at Stanford School of Medicine and Associate Professor (by courtesy) in the Department of Economics at Stanford University, where she is also a Senior Fellow at the Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR). She is a Research Associate at the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) and serves as an Editor of the Journal of Health Economics. Her research spans many areas of health economics, including health insurance, healthcare labor markets, and individual decision-making in health and healthcare. A unifying thread is evaluating whether markets and government policy effectively serve individuals and families or introduce distortions. Her ongoing work focuses on how families navigate prolonged health shocks. Maria received her BA in Economics & Mathematics and German Studies (with a concentration in History) from Yale University in 2008 and her PhD in Economics from MIT in 2014.

In The News

Health costs illustration
News

Examining US Physician Incomes by International Comparison

SHP's Maria Polyakova and Victoria Udalova compare physician income in the United States, Canada, Sweden and the Netherlands. U.S. doctors earn significantly more than their foreign counterparts—but that's largely because Americans across the board earn more.
Examining US Physician Incomes by International Comparison
Illustration of health care
News

Does Health Insurance Create Jobs?

A new study by SHP's Maria Polyakova sheds important new light on a key question in health care economics.
Does Health Insurance Create Jobs?
Maira Polyakova
News

Maria Polyakova: Economics Provides a Lens Through Which She Can Better Understand Structural Issues in Society

Maria Polyakova: Economics Provides a Lens Through Which She Can Better Understand Structural Issues in Society