Robert Wood Johnson Foundation

Menu
  • About RWJF
  • Our Work
  • Research & Publications
View All:
  • Grants
  • Topics
  • Blogs

Economists

You are now viewing 1 - 10 of 55 results

Sort results by:
  • Relevance
  • Alphabetical Order
  • Publication Date

Search RWJF

  • Topic: Economists
By Topic
  • Non-clinical professionals (38)
  • Health policy (36)
  • Health care system (32)
  • Political scientists (26)
  • Sociologists (26)
  • Obesity/childhood obesity (16)
  • Policy-makers (15)
  • Public policy and regulation (12)
  • Nutrition (12)
  • Preventive care (12)
  • Healthy communities (11)
  • Financial barriers to care (11)
  • Research (7)
  • Federal government (6)
  • Social determinants of health (5)
By Content
  • Content Type
    • Journal Article (22)
    • Book (13)
    • Program Result (11)
    • Blog Post (5)
    • Issue Brief (1)
    • National Program (1)
    • News Release (1)
    • Report (1)
  • Program Area
    • Human Capital (29)
    • Childhood Obesity (14)
    • Enterprise Level (4)
    • Coverage (3)
    • Pioneer (3)
    • Public Health (2)
By Demographics
  • Age
    • Adolescents (11-18 years) (5)
    • Children (6-10 years) (4)
    • Seniors (65+) (4)
    • Children (0-5 years) (2)
  • Race/Ethnicity
    • American Indian (incl. Alaska Native) (1)
  • Location
    • National (19)
    • Local or community-based (1)
  • States and Territories
    • California (CA) P (3)
    • Michigan (MI) ENC (1)

Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Scholars in Health Policy Research

May 2, 2013 | Program Result

Scholars in Health Policy Research builds a field of creative thinkers in the field of health policy. Recent graduates of PhD programs in economics, political science, and sociology study health policy at one of three universities for two years.

CBO Scoring Misses Billions of Dollars in Potential Long-Term Savings from Effective Obesity Prevention Policies, According to New Study

April 24, 2013 | News Release

Obesity-prevention policies could save the U.S. billions of dollars in the long run. A new report from the Campaign to End Obesity shows that the way estimates for the costs of legislation are done now misses a lot of their value.

The Long-Term Returns of Obesity Prevention Policies

April 24, 2013 | Report

Obesity-prevention policies could save the U.S. billions of dollars in the long run. A new report from the Campaign to End Obesity shows that the way estimates for the costs of legislation are done now misses a lot of their value.

Behavioral Economics CFP: Low-Value Care? Why Now?

March 6, 2013 | Pioneering Ideas Blog Post

Lori Melichar spoke with Drs. Kevin Volpp and David Asch, co-directors of the Foundation’s Behavioral Economics Initiative at the University of Pennsylvania, to talk about low-value health care.

New Call for Proposals: Pioneering Use of Behavioral Economics

March 4, 2013 | Pioneering Ideas Blog Post

Lori Melichar Gadkari, PhD, MA, a labor economist and senior program officer in the Foundation’s Research and Evaluation team shares information on Pioneer's newest CFP in the field of behavioral economics.

In 2013, Let’s Embrace Our Intellectual Diversity

December 24, 2012 | Human Capital Blog Post

This post is part of the "Health Care in 2013" series.

Scholars Behind National Resident Matching Program Algorithm Win Nobel Prize

October 16, 2012 | Human Capital Blog Post

Two men responsible for the National Resident Matching Program algorithm were recognized with the Nobel Prize in Economic Sciences.

Disease Politics and Medical Research Funding

October 1, 2012 | Journal Article

This article examines 53 diseases over 19 years to better understand how disease advocacy has impacted funding distributions, changed the perceived beneficiaries of policies, promoted metrics for commensuration, and made culture categories of worth more relevant to policy-making.

Accountable Care Organizations and Antitrust

April 11, 2012 | Journal Article

A new initiative of the Affordable Care Act known as accountable care organizations, received final rules from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.

Eight Innovative Ideas to Influence Health Behavior

April 4, 2012 | Pioneering Ideas Blog Post

The majority of my work in the Department of Research and Evaluation at the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation has been predicated on the long-held assumption that if you show people convincingly that doing one thing will create the outcome they desire, ...

  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
  • 6
  • Next
RWJF Home → Topics → Economists
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
  • Email
  • RSS

Our mission: to improve the health and health care of all Americans.

  • About RWJF
    • Our Mission
    • Program Areas
    • From Our President
    • Leadership & Staff
    • Annual Reports
    • Newsroom
    • Job Opportunities
    • Office Location
    • Our Policies
  • Our Work
    • Health Policy
    • Prevention
    • Cost and Value
    • Leadership
    • All Topics
  • Program Areas
    • Childhood Obesity
    • Coverage
    • Human Capital
    • Pioneer
    • Public Health
    • Quality/Equality
    • Vulnerable Populations
  • Research & Publications
    • Find RWJF Research
    • Assessing Our Impact
    • How We Work
    • Data Center
    • RWJF DataHub
  • Grants
    • What We Fund
    • Calls for Proposals
    • Grantee Resources
    • FAQs
  • Blogs
    • Human Capital
    • New Public Health
    • Pioneering Ideas
  • My RWJF
    • Subscription Management
    • My Profile
  • Contact RWJF
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions

© 2001–2013 Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. All Rights Reserved.