From health care reform in the United States to health care costs around the world, the Center is pleased to host leading health policy experts at our lunchtime seminar series. The seminars take place once a month at the Center's offices for approximately one hour.
The Center's FREE Health Policy Seminar Series: 2010
December 1, 2010
"The Role of Health Insurance Under Health Reform – Mitigating Harms to Health? Wealth? Or Just Bad Luck?"
Allison K. Hoffman, JD, faculty associate, UCLA Center for Health Policy Research; acting professor, UCLA School of Law
November 3, 2010
"Priorities for the NIH Office of Behavioral and Social Science Research"
Robert M. Kaplan, distinguished professor in the UCLA School of Public Health
October 6, 2010
“Health Care Reform: What Does It Mean for California, and the Nation?”
Gerald F. Kominski, associate director, UCLA Center for Health Policy Research
May 12, 2010
“State and Local Population Health Surveys: Action by States to Meet a Pressing Need for Data”
E. Richard Brown, director, UCLA Center for Health Policy Research
April 14, 2010
“The Uninsured in California and Health Care Reform”
Shana Alex Lavarreda, Director of Health Insurance Studies, UCLA Center for Health Policy Research
March 31, 2010
"Racial/Ethnic and Neighborhood Determinants of Visual Impairment Among Children in Southern California"
Gergana Kodjebacheva, Postdoctoral Scholar, Jules Stein Eye Institute and the Department of Opthamology, David Geffen School of Medicine, UCLA
February 17, 2010
"Medical Savings Accounts in China and the Effect of its Balances on Outpatient Utilization"
Vivienne Hui Zhang, UCLA Visiting Scholar and PhD candidate from the Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Department of Management and Marketing
January 13, 2010
"Impact of National Health Spending on Individual Health and Healthcare Experiences: Does Quantity Yield Quality?"
Onyebuchi A. Arah, associate professor in the UCLA School of Public Health’s Department of Epidemiology
The UCLA Center for Health Policy Research (CHPR) is one of the nation’s leading health policy research centers and the premier source of health policy information for California. UCLA CHPR improves the public’s health through high quality, objective, and evidence-based research and data that informs effective policymaking. UCLA CHPR is the home of the California Health Interview Survey (CHIS) and is part of the UCLA Fielding School of Public Health and affiliated with the UCLA Luskin School of Public Affairs.