Welcome to my site.
A little about me: I graduated from Stanford in 2012 with a B.A. with honors in Psychology, minors in Economics and Religious Studies, and an M.A. focused on political theory. After graduation, I was a summer research associate at the University of Pennsylvania’s Scattergood Program for the Applied Ethics of Behavioral Healthcare, then spent two years as a pre-doctoral research fellow at the National Institutes of Health's Department of Bioethics, where I studied topics such as whether frequent participation in research for payment ought to count as a form of work and the impact of patient advocacy organizations on the DSM revision process.
I then came to Princeton where I am pursuing a PhD in Sociology and Social Policy, with a Demography specialization through the Office of Population Research. My research interests, supported by a National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship, include the impact of disease advocacy groups on U.S. health policy, how resource allocation dilemmas shape parental litigation against institutions like schools and medical organizations, and child wellbeing.
Google Scholar page: scholar.google.com/citations?user=UNZpOpcAAAAJ&hl=en
Contact: [email protected]
A little about me: I graduated from Stanford in 2012 with a B.A. with honors in Psychology, minors in Economics and Religious Studies, and an M.A. focused on political theory. After graduation, I was a summer research associate at the University of Pennsylvania’s Scattergood Program for the Applied Ethics of Behavioral Healthcare, then spent two years as a pre-doctoral research fellow at the National Institutes of Health's Department of Bioethics, where I studied topics such as whether frequent participation in research for payment ought to count as a form of work and the impact of patient advocacy organizations on the DSM revision process.
I then came to Princeton where I am pursuing a PhD in Sociology and Social Policy, with a Demography specialization through the Office of Population Research. My research interests, supported by a National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship, include the impact of disease advocacy groups on U.S. health policy, how resource allocation dilemmas shape parental litigation against institutions like schools and medical organizations, and child wellbeing.
Google Scholar page: scholar.google.com/citations?user=UNZpOpcAAAAJ&hl=en
Contact: [email protected]