Lisa I. Iezzoni, MD, MSc

Director, Mongan Institute Health Policy Center, Massachusetts General Hospital;  Professor of Medicine, Harvard Medical School

BA, Duke University, 1976
MSc, Harvard School of Public Health, Health Policy and Management Program, 1978
MD, Harvard Medical School, 1984

Dr. Iezzoni has spent more than three decades conducting health services research focusing on three primary areas:  risk adjustment methods for predicting cost and clinical outcomes of care; use of administrative data for assessing health care quality; and health care experiences and outcomes of persons with disabilities.   After spending 16 years as Co-Director of Research in the Division of General Medicine and Primary Care at Boston’s Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Dr. Iezzoni joined the MIHP as Associate Director in 2006.  She became Director of MIHP in 2009.

Dr. Iezzoni has led numerous research grants with funding from the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, National Institutes of Health, the Health Care Financing Administration, the Patient-Centered Outcomes Institute, The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, and other private foundations.  An internationally recognized expert in risk adjustment, she has edited Risk Adjustment for Measuring Health Care Outcomes, now in its fourth edition. Dr. Iezzoni began her disability research with a 1996 Investigator Award in Health Policy Research from RWJF, and the book summarizing this work, When Walking Fails: Mobility Impairments of Adults with Chronic Conditions, appeared in 2003.  Another book considering disability experiences more broadly, More Than Ramps: A Guide to Improving Health Care Quality and Access for People with Disabilities (coauthored with Bonnie L. O’Day), was published in 2006.  Dr. Iezzoni has also published numerous original articles, editorials, and commentaries in major medical and health services research journals.

Dr. Iezzoni speaks widely, and she has served on numerous committees and advisory boards of professional and governmental organizations, including the National Institutes of Health, the Institute of Medicine, the National Quality Forum, and The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Clinical Scholars Program.  For the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, she served on the National Committee on Vital and Health Statistics (1994-2001) and Secretary's Advisory Committee on Health Promotion and Disease Prevention Objectives for 2020 (2008-2009).  She has served on the editorial boards of the Annals of Internal Medicine, the Journal of General Internal Medicine, Health Affairs, Medical Care, Health Services Research, and the Disability and Health Journal, among others.  In 2000, Dr. Iezzoni was elected to the Institute of Medicine in the National Academy of Sciences.