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Stanford Prevention Research Center
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Associate Professor of Medicine at the Stanford Prevention Research Center, SCPKU Fellow April-June 2014
stafford.jpg MD, PhD

Randall Stafford is an associate professor of medicine at the Stanford Prevention Research Center and a fellow at CHP/PCOR. He is an epidemiologist, health services researcher and primary-care internist. His research focuses on patient and physician interventions to improve chronic disease prevention, and the mechanisms by which physicians adopt new prevention practices. Many of his published studies have documented and raised concerns about the so-called "quality gap" -- the healthcare system's failure to consistently implement clinically proven therapies -- and have helped shape policy initiatives aimed at improving medical care. His research has also focused on drug costs and patterns of medication prescribing. At the Stanford Prevention Research Center, he directs the Program on Prevention and Outcomes Practices. He maintains clinical responsibilities at Stanford's Preventive Cardiology and Internal Medicine clinics, and serves on Stanford Medical School's faculty Senate.

From 1994 to 2001 he served on the faculty at Harvard University Medical School and at Massachusetts General Hospital's Institute for Health Policy, where he was principal investigator on several federally funded projects that assessed and sought to improve physician practices. As assistant director of primary care operations improvement at Massachusetts General, he led several projects aimed at improving the quality of outpatient care at the hospital. He joined the Stanford faculty in 2001.

Stafford earned a BA in sociology from Reed College, an MS in health administration from Johns Hopkins University, an MD from UC-San Francisco and a PhD in epidemiology from UC-Berkeley. He completed an internal medicine residency at Massachusetts General Hospital and a fellowship in epidemiology at the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Stanford Health Policy Associate
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This series from the NBER presents new research by leading economists on current health care policy issues. The papers in this seventh volume, originally presented at the annual Frontiers in Health Policy Research conference held in Washington D.C. in the summer of 2003, reflect the economic challenges faced by policymakers and health care professionals in an age of budget deficits. Topics discussed include prescription drug benefits as a stand-alone component of Medicare, disability rates and Medicare costs, and conversion to for-profit health plans.

Sixth edition (2003), Fifth edition (2002), Fourth edition (2001), Third edition (2000), Second edition (1999), First edition (1998)

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Cambridge, MA: MIT Press
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