Megan Shepherd-Banigan
Duke University
Megan Shepherd-Banigan
Dr. Megan Shepherd-Banigan is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Population Health Sciences at Duke University School of Medicine and Core Faculty at the Duke-Margolis Institute for Health Policy. She is also a Health Research Scientist in the Durham Center of Innovation to Accelerate Discovery and Practice Transformation (ADAPT) at the Durham Veteran’s Administration (VA) and an HSR&D Career Development Awardee (2019-2024). She holds a doctorate in Health Services Research from the University of Washington. Dr. Shepherd-Banigan applies rigorous methodological designs to evaluate the effectiveness of system-level programs and policies on health and social outcomes. Her research interests center on improving access to and quality of health care services for medically vulnerable populations, including individuals with mental illness and older adults with cognitive impairment, and their family caregivers. She has recently applied the following methodological approaches to her studies: causal inference for observational data, mixed methods, and prediction models using machine learning algorithms.
FURTHER INFORMATION
Countries | United States; |
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Topics | Access to care; Care integration/ coordination; Care needs poverty and deprivation; Community-based LTC; Dementia care and support; Employment education and family carers; Evaluation of LTC systems and services; Financing LTC; LTC and people with mental health conditions; Outcomes for unpaid/informal carers; Social connection; Unpaid / informal care; |
Methods | Causal inference in Long-Term Care; Mixed methods; Policy analysis; Quantitative data analysis; Quasi-experimental methods; Systematic Review; |
Role | Research; |
Interest Groups | Employment Education and Family carers; Long-Term Care Policy; Quasi-experimental methods; |
Website | https://scholars.duke.edu/person/MEGAN.SHEPHERD-BANIGAN |
ORC.ID | 0000-0002-4020-8936 |
Research interests | Long-term care for older adults with dementia and adults with mental illness Policy and system-level interventions Policy supports for informal carers
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