DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH
MANAGEMENT & POLICY CORE FACULTY
Assistant Professor mla72@georgetown.edu
Maria L. Alva joins the Health Care Management & Policy Department at the School of Health from the McCourt School of Public Policy Massive Data Institute. Her research focuses on impact evaluations of healthcare interventions and the cost- effectiveness of preventive decisions. She works primarily in the area of behavioral health and NCDs. Her interest in NCDs started at the University of Oxford, where her Ph.D. research focused on economic analyses of the United Kingdom Prospective Diabetes Study a landmark trial of policies to improve type-2 diabetes management. Before joining academia, Maria worked as a Senior Research Associate at Impaq International (now American Institutes for Research) and Health Economist in the Division of Public Health and Policy Research at RTI International, where she worked on disease models for the CDC based on individual patient data to predict lifetime costs and outcomes and on CMS program valuations of healthcare interventions using both Medicare and Medicaid data.
Education
Oxford University – DPhil, Public Health Oxford University – MPhil, Economics
Expertise/Interests
Health Economics, Program Evaluation, Behavioral Health, Public Health
C AROLINE EFIRD, PhD, MPH
Assistant Professor caroline.efird@georgetown.edu
Dr. Caroline R. Efird (she/her) joins the Department of Health Management and Policy as an assistant professor on the research track. Her research seeks to promote health equity by addressing social and structural drivers of health disparities and inequities. As an interdisciplinary social scientist, she primarily uses mixed-methods to investigate how whiteness and racism influence the health and well-being of racially majoritized and minoritized populations. Dr. Efird has published her scholarship in journals such as the Du Bois Review: Social Science Research on Race, Pedagogy in Health Promotion, Social Science & Medicine, SSM-Population Health, and others. She has also authored and contributed to two chapters in the forthcoming second edition of Racism: Science & Tools for the Public Health Professional (American Public Health Association Press). She recently completed a Postdoctoral Fellowship in Health Justice Research at the Racial Justice Institute at Georgetown University. She holds a PhD and MPH in Health Behavior from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Gillings School of Global Public Health. Prior to her career in health equity research, Dr. Efird earned a B.S. (with highest honors) in Elementary Education from Appalachian State University and she worked with children and families in public schools and non-profit settings for over 9 years.
Education
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Gillings School of Global Public Health – PhD, Health Behavior University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Gillings School of Global Public Health – MPH, Health Behavior Appalachian State University – BS, Elementary Education
Expertise/Interests
Health Equity, Population Health, Rural Health, Structural and Social Determinants of Health, Qualitative Research Methods
Hours of Availability: Meetings available by appointment
GOLLU, PHD
MHSA Program Director
Associate Professor gultekin.gollu@georgetown.edu
Dr. Gultekin Gollu is an Associate Professor in the Department of Health Management & Policy. His research focuses on the impact of health policies on labor markets, crime, and health outcomes, particularly addressing disparities within U.S. society. Dr. Gollu collaborates with healthcare organizations on data analytics projects aimed at enhancing hospital operations and patient outcomes. His teaching specialties include health data analytics and visualization, health economics, and health services research. As the Director of the Master’s in Health Systems Administration program, he brings extensive leadership experience from his previous institution. Dr. Gollu is also dedicated to promoting diversity, intercultural dialogue, and sustainability through his service in various organizations.
Education
University of Wisconsin-Madison – PhD, Economics
Bogazici University – MA, Economics Sabanci University – BA, Economics
Expertise/Interests
Health Economics, Health Data Analytics, Healthcare Policy Analysis
Hours of Availability: Meetings available by appointment
Professor crg70@georgetown.edu
Carole Roan Gresenz is jointly appointed in the McCourt School of Public Policy and the School of Health. In the School of Health, she holds the Bette Jacobs Endowed Professorship in the Department of Health Management and Policy. She served as the Interim Dean of the School of Nursing and Health Studies from 2019-2021 and as Senior Associate Dean from 2018-2019. She previously worked at the RAND Corporation where her positions included Director, RAND Economics, Sociology, and Statistics Department; Director, RAND Health Economics, Finance and Organization program; and Associate Director, RAND Institute for Civil Justice. Her recent research examines how Alzheimer's disease and related dementias affect the financial well-being of individuals and families during their early stage prior to diagnosis; assesses the effects of aggressive versus conservative treatment of lowrisk prostate cancer on mortality, adverse side effects and episode treatment costs; and explores the usefulness of social media data for firearms research. She serves on the editorial boards of Health Services Research, Medical Care Research and Review, and Transforming Care. She holds a Ph.D. and M.A. in economics from Brown University and a B.A. in economics from Loyola University Maryland.
Education
Brown University - PhD, Economics
Loyola College in Maryland – BA, Economics
Expertise/Interests
Health Economics, Labor Economics
Hours of Availability: Meetings available by appointment
Professor
Founder and Co-Director of Racial Justice Institute
Founder and Director of the Center for Men’s Health Equity dmg161@georgetown.edu
Dr. Derek M. Griffith is a Founding Co-Director of the Racial Justice Institute,Founder and Director of the Center for Men’s Health Equity, Member of the Lombardi Comprehensive Cancer Center, and Professor of Health Management & Policy and Oncology at Georgetown University. He also serves as the Chair of Global Action on Men’s Health – a global men’s health advocacy organization.
Trained in psychology and public health, Dr. Griffith’s program of research focuses on developing anti-racism approaches to achieve racial, ethnic, and gender equity in health. His research has explored how notions of manhood, trustworthiness, intersectionality, and individual tailoring can be incorporated into community-based and policy strategies to promote health and well-being. Dr.Griffith is a contributor to and editor of three books and the author of over 150 peer-reviewed manuscripts. He has been the principal investigator of research grants from the American Cancer Society, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, and several institutes within the National Institutes of Health. Dr.Griffith serves on the editorial boards of several public health and men’s health journals. Recently, he received a citation from the president of the American Psychological Association, “For his extraordinary leadership in addressing the impacts of racism on the health and well-being of the nation and specifically for African American and Latino men”.
Education
DePaul University – PhD, Clinical-Community Psychology
University of Maryland at College Park – BA, Psychology and African-American Studies
Expertise/Interests
Cancer Disparities, Translational Genomics, Qualitative Research, Behavioral Interventions, CommunityBased Participatory Research, Health Behavior, Health Equity, Implementation Science, Men's Health, Precision Lifestyle Medicine, Structural Racism as a Determinant of Health
Hours of Availability:
Meetings available by appointment
SAM HALABI, JD, M.PHIL
Professor sfh9@georgetown.edu
Sam Halabi is a Professor in the Department of Health Management & Policy and the Director of the Center for Transformational Health Law at the O’Neill Institute for National and Global Health Law. Prior to joining SOH, Prof. Halabi served as the senior associate vice-president for Health Policy and Ethics in Colorado State University's Office for the Vice-President of Research and as a professor at the Colorado School of Public Health. He is the former Manley O. Hudson Professor of Law and director of the Center for Intellectual Property and Entrepreneurship at the University of Missouri, where he earned the Husch Blackwell Award for Distinguished Teaching He has published five books and more than 80 manuscripts in the fields of data sharing, the development and deployment of vaccines in routine and emergency circumstances, liability and indemnity factors affecting private sector participation in emergency response, the philosophy of medicine, international technology transfer, public health ethics, universal health coverage, and vector-borne disease surveillance. His work on international cooperation and data sharing in epidemic and pandemic preparedness has been supported by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research, the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, Resolve to Save Lives, USAID, the Wellcome Trust, the Wilson Center, and the World Health Organization. His work is published in the Georgetown Law Journal, the Harvard International Law Journal, JAMA, the Lancet, the New England Journal of Medicine, Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society and the Yale Journal of International Law. Halabi advises or has advised the COVAX Facility, the World Bank, the World Health Organization, the National Foundation for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and the Global Virome Project, among other national and international organizations.
Halabi is a licensed attorney and practiced law at the Washington, D.C. office of Latham & Watkins and clerked for U.S. District Judge Nanette K. Laughrey. His corporate law research has been cited by both federal and state courts in the U.S.
Education
Harvard University – JD
Oxford University – MPhil, International Relations
JD Harvard Law School
MPhil University of Oxford (St Antony’s College)
BA, BS, Kansas State University, summa cum laude, Phi Beta Kappa.
Expertise/Interests
Corporations, Data Science for Public Policy, Intellectual Property, Global Health Law, Philosophy of Science, Vaccines
Hours of availability: Meetings by appointment
HCMP Director
Associate Professor sean.huang@georgetown.edu 202-687-5494
Dr. Sean Huang is an Associate Professor in the Department of Health Management & Policy at Georgetown University. Dr. Huang’s research focuses on the regulation and behavior of hospitals, nursing homes, and home health agencies domestically and internationally, including the relationship between a health care provider’s governance structure and the quality of care. His academic pursuits also involve the application of corporate finance and industrial organization to health care delivery systems. He teaches Financial Management.
SEAN HUANG, PHD
Education
University of Michigan - PhD, Health Economics University of Michigan - MA, Economics National University of Taiwan - BA, Finance/International Relations
Expertise/Interests
Health Economics, Healthcare Finance, Healthcare Markets, Long-Term Care
Hours of Availability: Meetings available by appointment
Assistant Professor vh151@georgetown.edu
202-687-4209
Vanessa Hurley is an assistant professor within the Department of Health Management & Policy in the School of Health. Her research interests lie at the intersection of organizational learning and quality improvement, with a particular focus on healthcare collaboratives and their role in elevating patient-centered innovations. She is also interested in understanding organizational correlates of sustained quality improvement engagement at the physician practice level. In addition to having conducted research in partnership with the High-Value Healthcare Collaborative, she also collaborates with scholars at the UC Berkeley Center for Healthcare Organizational and Innovation Research, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, MedStar Lombardi Comprehensive Cancer Center, and the MedStar Health National Center for Human Factors in Healthcare.
She previously worked as a health policy analyst for the New America Foundation and as a project manager and quality improvement consultant within rural and community healthcare settings across the Northeast. At Georgetown, she teaches Organizational Leadership and Strategic Management for graduate students in the MHSA program in addition to mentoring undergraduate honors thesis students.
Education
University of California at Berkeley - PhD, Health Policy Tufts University - MS, Biomedical Science Dartmouth College - MPH, Health Policy Dartmouth College - AB, English
Expertise/Interests
Health Administration, Health Care Management, Organizational Behavior
Hours of Availability: Meetings available by appointment
Professor bette.jacobs@georgetown.edu
Bette Jacobs is Professor, Health Management & Policy; Distinguished Scholar and co-founder at the O’Neill Institute for National and Global Health Law; and a Fellow and Visiting Professor at Campion Hall University of Oxford. A Native American whose body of work spans community, academic, service, and corporate leadership, she is recognized for contributions in successful start-ups, financial integrity, and interdisciplinary innovations. She served with distinction as Dean for the Georgetown University School of Nursing and Health Studies for 11 years overseeing unprecedented programmatic growth within the University. Previous executive experience includes vice presidency for Honda of America Manufacturing; founding faculty member and Associate Director of Applied Research at the Civitan International Research Center; and Acting Dean of Graduate Studies and Research at California State University. Jacobs’ extraordinary cross-disciplinary and cross- sector leadership has fostered innovation and improved systems.
Her personal and professional activities emanate from crossing childhood cultural boundaries triangulating a colonized, missionized tribal history through pathways in education, business, and service. Strong cultural roots anchor and animate her work to advance the common good with practical abilities to do so. Dr. Jacobs is a scholar skilled in operations. She established enduring innovative models in business and education and sorted or refined programs in both. Dr. Jacobs has published numerous articles and chapters including “Bridging the Divide Between Genomic Science and Indigenous People” in the Journal of Legal and Medical Education, hosted a colloquium featuring the US Health and Human Service position statement on Personalized Medicine, and has testified before Congress. Her honors include ceremonial/commencement recognition at Heritage College on the Yakima Indian Reservation, Chang Gung University in Taiwan, Anhui University in China, and James Cook University in Australia. She has designed and implemented corporate safety, human resource, construction, and efficiency projects using best-in-class quality standards. Dr. Jacobs has presented at the Institute of Medicine, the American Statistical Association, EUWHO for medical students at the World Health Organization, and for wide variety of management meetings associated with health, engineering, and culture. She served as expert panel member for reports to shape policy for the Secretary of Health and Human Services, the Social Security Administration, and National Academy of Science. She chaired NIH study sections and consulted on the design and launch of process engineering and for imaging facilities. She has mentored students and fellows in many fields in places as representative as Wyoming, Texas, England, China, and Japan. Dr. Jacobs is long time member of organizations such as the Society for the Advancement of Chicanos and Native Americans in to Science, work groups such as the International Group on Indigenous Health Measurement, and served on Boards ranging from Environmental Health and Safety to Reading is Fundamental.
Dr. Jacobs has been involved with social entrepreneurship throughout her career. Her current scholarship and teaching on non-profit governance incorporates the entire scope of a diverse and unique experience. Since her sabbatical at Oxford University, this body of work reflects deeper understanding of the British Charity Model that shaped the foundation used for US and International aid. She has pursed areas where harmony across non-
profit, public, and commercial sectors contribute to improving the human condition. In addition, her research is informed by political theory, Jesuit Catholic values, and the Honda philosophy and focuses on the non-profit sector as a primary vehicle for the common good.
Education
University of Texas – PhD, Public Health California State University – MS, Public Health California State University – BS, Nursing
Expertise/Interests
Organizational Leadership and Governance, Non-profit, Non-Governmental and For-Profit Models, Health Equity, Racial Justice, Policy and Programs as Instruments for the Common Good
Hours of Availability:
Meetings available by appointment
Assistant Professor sk2327@georgetown.edu
So Yeon Kang joins the Department of Health Management and Policy as a tenureline Assistant Professor. She will also be a member of the Lombardi Comprehensive Cancer Center. Kang holds a PhD in Health Service Research and Policy from the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Health, an MBA from the Johns Hopkins Carey Business School, and an undergraduate degree from Korea University. Her research agenda centers around the intersection of healthcare payment policy, healthcare innovations, and business management. Currently, her work focuses on three main areas: prescription drug pricing policy, drug access and affordability, and the diffusion of innovations in the context of value-based payment reform. Kang’s research has been published in peer-reviewed journals, such as JAMA, JAMA Health Forum, and Health Affairs, and has been featured in media outlets including Forbes and Reuters. Prior to coming to academia, Kang gained experience in the pharmaceutical industry, having held positions in pricing, commercial strategy, and health technology assessment at Eli Lilly and Novartis Oncology.
Education
Johns Hopkins University – PhD, Health Service Research and Policy Johns Hopkins University – MBA
Expertise/Interests
Interests: health care payment and coverage policy; prescription drug pricing policy, access, and affordability; precision medicine; value-based payment models; care delivery innovations Expertise: health services research; econometric analysis of large databases (e.g., insurance claims data, survey, administrative data, etc.); cost analysis, economic evaluation; comparative policy research; macro-organizational change theories.
DAE HYUN (DANIEL ) KIM, PHD
Assistant Professor dk1146@georgetown.edu
Dae Hyun (Daniel) Kim is an Assistant Professor of Health Management and Policy in Georgetown University's School of Health.
His research portfolio mainly centers around healthcare quality improvement. With a focus on health literacy, well-being, and education, his work aims to bridge gaps within the context of healthcare organizations. Dr. Kim's research has been published in Journal of Healthcare Management, JAMIA, and Annals of Surgery. He holds Ph.D. from University of Alabama at Birmingham and B.A. from University of Michigan.
Education
University of Alabama at Birmingham – PhD, Health Services Administration University of Michigan – BA, Psychology
Expertise/Interests
Health literacy, Patient Engagement, Access and Health Disparity, Competency-Based Education, Long-Term and Palliative Care, Quantitative Methods, Qualitative Methods, Mixed Methods
CHRISTOPHER J. KING, PHD, MHSC,
Associate Professor Dean of the School of Health
ck806@georgetown.edu
As inaugural Dean of the Georgetown University School of Health, Christopher works collaboratively with internal and external stakeholders to establish a world class academic destination for advancing health. He is also responsible for academic and operational leadership of the school which is currently comprised of three Departments - Human Science, Global Health and Health Management and Policy - representing more than 400 students and 78 full-time and part-time faculty.
Prior to his role as Dean, he served as chair of the Department of Health Management & Policy where he provided visionary leadership and oversight of undergraduate degree in Health Care Management and Policy and a nationally accredited master's degree in Health Management & Policy.
As an associate professor, he teaches and contributes to scholarship on the creation of equitable systems of care within the context of national health reform goals. He works closely with public and private providers to bridge the gap between medical care and healthcare. Prior to joining Georgetown University, Christopher served as the first Assistant Vice President of Community Health for MedStar Health, a $6B not-for-profit healthcare system comprised of 10 hospitals in the Baltimore/Washington region. Accomplishments included planning, launching and managing a new corporate function designed to apply more rigor and evidence in community- based planning, implementation and evaluation. He was also responsible for developing, testing and evaluating innovative approaches to integrate social factors in systems of care.
Prior to his work with MedStar Health, Christopher served as a director for Greater Baden Medical Services, Inc., a Federally Qualified Health Center in southern Maryland. During his four-year tenure, he managed federal grants, oversaw support services and secured more than $7M in public and private grants to promote health equity and improve the health of vulnerable and underserved populations. Through volunteer work, he has spearheaded regional efforts to heighten awareness of how racism, discrimination and implicit bias influence individual and population health. Christopher is an active member of the American College of Healthcare Executives and has been a contributor to Healthcare Executive magazine. He has conducted health disparity and health equity presentations to national audiences. And as a former senior fellow of the Health Research & Educational Trust (HRET), Christopher represents an esteemed group of national thought leaders dedicated to transforming health care through research and education. His national investigations on screening and barriers to care among cancer survivors by race and ethnicity were published in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine and the American Journal of Medical Quality. His thought leadership around Black Lives and the Triple Aim has been published in the Journal of the National Medical Association. Christopher is a Fellow of the American College of Healthcare Executives and he currently serves as Secretary of the DC Hospital Association Board of Directors. He has also been an advisor for the DC Department of Health State Innovation Model, Adventist HealthCare's Center for Health Equity and Wellness and the Maryland Governor’s Wellmobile Program. In 2019, he was appointed a Commissioner for the District of Columbia Commission on Health Equity. In 2020, he authored Health Disparities in the Black Community: An Imperative for Racial Equity and most recently, his work on Race, Place and Structural Racism in the District of Columbia was published in Health Affairs – the nation’s leading peer-reviewed journal on health, healthcare and policy.
The Washington Business Journal has recognized him as one of the region’s top minority business leaders.
Education
University of Maryland – PhD, Health Services Administration Towson University - MHSc, Master of Health Science, East Carolina University – BS, School and Community Health
Expertise/Interests
Health Disparities, Public Health, Racial Equity, Social Determinants of Health, Health Equity, Racial Equity, Systemic Racism and Health Outcomes
Hours of Availability:
Meetings available by appointment. Please contact executive assistant, Angel Phan (angel.phan@georgetown.edu)
JOHN KRAEMER, JD, MPH
Department Chair
Associate Professor jdk32@georgetown.edu
John Kraemer is the department chair and associate professor in Georgetown University's Department of Health Management & Policy, and he is also affiliated with the university's O’Neill Institute for National and Global Health Law and African Studies Program. Trained in both public health and the law, his work focuses on the intersection of empirical evidence and public health policy. Substantively, he mainly studies women and children’s health in rural populations in sub-Saharan Africa and road safety for vulnerable road users. Methodologically, most of his work analyzes complex sample survey data. His current and past projects include work with the Pink Ribbon Red Ribbon initiative against women's cancers, the United Nations Special Envoy for Malaria, and Last Mile Health. At Georgetown, John teaches undergraduate epidemiology and graduate quantitative methods. He also teaches a course on the intersection of democracy, rights, and health and a seminar on the 2014-2015 West African Ebola epidemic.
Education
Johns Hopkins University - MPH, Public Health Georgetown University - JD, Law/Public Health Baker University - BA, Political Science
Expertise/Interests
Epidemiology, Global Health, Health Law, International Health, Survey Research
Hours of Availability: Meetings available by appointment
Associate Professor suhr@georgetown.edu
Ryung Suh brings three decades of executive management and organizational leadership experience and expertise and has been teaching at Georgetown since 2003, serving as Chair of the Department of Health Management & Policy from 2014-2019. He serves as the Chief of Staff, Veterans Health Administration, U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs and directs an incubator lab and social impact investment fund. He previously built and exited a middle- market health management consultancy that led major transformation efforts for federal health agencies, directed public and private sector enterprise-level modernization and organizational change initiatives, managed a commercial consulting practice serving the life sciences industry, and launched over a dozen successful businesses that have served government and private industry clients. He is the President-Elect of the American College of Preventive Medicine and has previously served as President of the American Association of Public Health Physicians, on the Board of Governors of the American Journal of Preventive Medicine, on a National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine Committee, and in other leadership roles within organized medicine. He has served as a Senior Fellow with NORC at the University of Chicago, on the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights State Advisory Committee, and as a Term Member on the Council on Foreign Relations. Dr. Suh also served as an infantry and medical corps officer for 26 years with a diverse set of operational, special operations, and military health system responsibilities. He is a combat veteran who has deployed to multiple overseas locations to include service as a Task Force Surgeon during Operation Enduring Freedom, where he was awarded the Bronze Star Medal. His military qualifications include airborne, ranger, jumpmaster, and flight surgeon.
Education
F. Edward Hébert School of Medicine at the Uniformed Services University – MPH Georgetown University McDonough School of Business – MBA
Georgetown University Graduate Public Policy Program – MPP Georgetown University School of Medicine –MD United States Military Academy – BS, Chemistry
Expertise/Interests
Business Innovations and Entrepreneurship, Health Care Management and Policy, Organizational Transformation, Population and Public Health, Occupational Medicine
Hours of Availability:
Daily 7:00 AM – 6:00 PM EST, by appointment
MICHAEL STOTO, PhD
Professor Emeritus stotom@georgetown.edu
Michael A. Stoto, PhD, is a Professor Emeritus in the Department of Health Management and Policy, School of Health, Georgetown University. He is also an adjunct professor of biostatistics at the Harvard T. H. Chan School of Public Health and a Professorial Lecturer in Biostatistics and Bioinformatics at The George Washington University. A statistician, epidemiologist, and health services researcher, Dr. Stoto’s methodological interest includes systematic reviews and meta-analysis, community health assessment, evaluation methods, and performance measurement. His substantive research focuses on public health systems, especially with regard to emergency preparedness, infectious disease policy, and drug and vaccine safety.
Much of Dr. Stoto’s recent work has focused on public health emergency preparedness, especially the evaluation of biosurveillance methods and systems, the development of methods for assessing emergency preparedness capabilities based on exercises and actual events, and the effectiveness of public health systems. He was the coPrincipal Investigator of the CDC-funded Preparedness and Emergency Response Research Center based at the Harvard School of Public Health, and currently serves as Co-chair of the Public Health Extreme Events Research Network (PHEER) Steering Committee. Dr. Stoto is also the lead associate editor for Globalization and Health’s special collection on cross-border infectious disease threats. During the COVID-19 pandemic, Dr. Stoto’s research has focused on surveillance and data systems to guide decision-making, interpretation of test results and policy for testing, and other aspects of public health policy and practice from the local to global level. He is working with the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC) and Alma Mater Studiorum -Università di Bologna on the assessment of public health emergency capabilities and capacities during the COVID-19 pandemic and the implications monitoring and evaluation methodology for public health emergency preparedness.
Education
Harvard University – PhD, Statistics Princeton University – AB, Statistics
Expertise/Interests: Epidemiology, Biostatistics, Health Systems Research, Public Health Policy
Hours of Availability: Meetings available by appointment
Saad Chaudhry – Luminis Health
Sonia Canzater -O’Neill Institute for National and Global Health Law
Greg Downing – Holy Cross Hospital
Sara Hejazi – Tandigm Health
Bernard Horak – MITRE
Fred Hyde – Fred Hyde & Associates
Andrew Mulcahy – RAND Corporation
Ruth Pollard – District of Columbia Developing Families Center
Adi Radhakrishnan - O’Neill Institute for National and Global Health Law
Sheela Ranganathan - O’Neill Institute for National and Global Health Law
Frederic Selck- Intensity
Ipsita Smolinski - CAPITOL STREET
Angela Thomas – MedStar Health Research Institute
Shannon Wu - American Hospital Association,
Mimi Zhang – Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center
Last Updated: July 2024