Thousands of mergers and acquisitions involving health systems, hospitals, physician practices, post-acute care facilities and other health care providers have fundamentally reshaped health care markets. Prior research finds consolidation is associated with increases in prices and few, if any, improvements in quality. A new research program, funded by the National Institute on Aging, is building on this foundation to comprehensively investigate the effects of health care market consolidation (including facility openings and closings) and health systems on care and outcomes of patients experiencing acute stroke and cardiac events. With a focus on high-risk patients and with access to longitudinal micro-data on patients, health care organizations and markets, an expert multi-disciplinary research team will use quasi-experimental methods to investigate mechanisms by which changes in health care delivery systems impact this critical population and develop targets for policy intervention.
For this research, Professor David Cutler of Harvard University and the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) is seeking to hire a programmer-analyst. This person will join a team of team of people refining and extending the Health Systems and Provider Database, creating patient cohorts, measuring and analyzing changes in healthcare markets, and conducting regression analyses. The work requires a sophisticated understanding of data, a high level of programming skill, and knowledge and experience conducting statistical analyses.
Essential Duties and Responsibilities (other duties may be assigned as required)
Minimum Required Technical Skills and Qualifications
Preferred :
Programmeranalyst • Cambridge, MA, United States