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David E. Rogers Award
Robert H. Brook, M.D., Sc.D.
RAND Corporation
David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA
University of California, Los Angeles, School of Public Health
The David E. Rogers Award is sponsored by the AAMC and the Robert
Wood Johnson Foundation. The award honors David E. Rogers, M.D.,
a former president of the foundation and an exemplar of academic
medicine's commitment to meeting the health care needs of our nation.
The award recognizes a medical school faculty member who has made
major contributions to improving the health and health care of the
American people.
That a U.S. president would devote an entire news conference to
medical errorsas President Bill Clinton did following the
Institute of Medicine's 1999 report, "To Err Is Human: Building
a Safer Health System"was "inconceivable" 30 years ago, says
Joseph P. Newhouse, Ph.D., director, and professor of health policy
and management for Harvard University. But the fact that quality
of health care services so quickly garnered national attention,
says Dr. Newhouse, is due largely to the young physician scientist
he hired at the RAND Corporation in 1973: Robert H. Brook.
Originally recruited to work on the RAND Health Insurance Experiment,
Dr. Robert Brook is today vice president and director for RAND Health.
He is also professor of medicine and geriatrics at the David Geffen
School of Medicine at UCLA and professor of health services at the
University of California, Los Angeles, School of Public Health.
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"Academic medical centers should lead an international
effort to empower communities, eliminate health disparities,
and ensure that all people can pursue life and happiness,
by having access to needed, high-quality medical care."
-Dr. Robert Brook
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Without question, say his colleagues, Dr. Brook invented the field
of quality measurement and outcomes of care, shifting focus from
what care patients receive, to how they fare as a result. In so
doing, he not only pioneered a new way of looking at health care,
but also promoted greater recognition of the (then) emerging field
of health services research. Additionally, he led the way at RAND
for studies focusing on the health status and outcomes of vulnerable
populations (the frail elderly, HIV-positive individuals, children
with special health needs, the mentally ill) for whom standard measures
are often inappropriate.
At the national level, Dr. Brook's work has virtually transformed
the U.S. health care landscape, putting quality measurement and
improvement high atop the agendas of public and private decision-makers,
the medical profession and the public. He has frequently testified
before Congress regarding health care quality and provided legislative
staff with technical assistance drafting legislation and report
language.
Dr. Brook's far-reaching impact also extends to new generations
of physician-scientists now engaged in research in the U.S. and
abroad. As head of the Robert Wood Johnson Clinical Scholars Program
since the program's inception, Dr. Brook directed the education
of more than 300 clinician scientists including a former U.S. Surgeon
General (David Satcher, M.D., Ph.D.). According to one past student,
"Bob is one of the most incredible mentors ever placed on earth.
He's like the sand in the oysterhe agitates people to become
the best they can be."
Dr. Brook received his B.S. in chemistry from the University of
Arizona, where he was elected to Phi Beta Kappa. After earning his
M.D. from the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, he completed
his residency, internship, and fellowship at Baltimore City Hospitals,
and remained in Baltimore to earn his Sc.D. degree from the Johns
Hopkins School of Hygiene and Public Health (now the Johns Hopkins
Bloomberg School of Public Health).
Among Dr. Brook's numerous honors and recognitions is the Gustav
O. Lienhard Award for the advancement of personal health services,
the Institute of Medicine's highest honor. He has also received
the Baxter Foundation Prize for excellence in health services research
as well as the Distinguished Health Services Research Award of the
Association of Health Services Research, the Richard and Hinda Rosenthal
Foundation Award of the American College of Physicians for improving
the health of the nation, and the Robert J. Glaser Award of the
Society of General Internal Medicine. In 2000, he was awarded the
Peter Reizenstein Prize for his paper "Defining and Measuring Quality
of Care: A Perspective from U.S. Researchers," and the National
Committee for Quality Assurance Health Quality Award for pursuit
of health care quality at all levels of the health system. Additionally,
he was selected by his alma mater, Johns Hopkins University, as
one of its 75 "Heroes of Public Health," and, in 2000, was recognized
with the Research!America Award for Sustained Leadership at the
National Level.
Find out more about the David
E. Rogers Award, nominate a deserving individual, and view a
list of previous award recipients.
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