|
|
| |
Professor Rodwin
earned his Ph.D. in City and Regional Planning and his MPH in Public Health. His principal research involves cross-national comparative
analysis of health care systems and policy. He directs the
World
Cities Project, a cooperative venture of the Wagner School of Public Service and the International Longevity Center - USA, which examines the impact of population aging and
longevity on New York, London, Paris, and Tokyo. Professor Rodwin is a recipient
of a 1999 Robert Wood Johnson Investigator Award in Health Policy
for his research project on "Health and Megacities: New York, London,
Paris and Tokyo." He has received two New York University
Curricular Development Challenge Fund grants: one in 1997
(with Professor
Roger Kropf) to develop and teach a TV-interactive class with the
University of Paris IX (Dauphine) on "Managed Care and European Health
Care Reform;" and, more recently, a grant to introduce students in
Community Health and Medical Care (P11.1830)
to interactive software systems
for accessing health data. He has written and lectured extensively
on the French health care system
and has consulted widely with such
organizations as the World Bank, Open Society Institute, United
Nations Development Program, French National Health Insurance Funds,
and Ministry of Finance, Mauritius.
|
|
 |
|