A. James O'Malley
My methodological research interests have centered on the design and analysis of medical device clinical trials, multivariate-hierarchical modeling, causal inference and social network analysis. I have developed novel statistical methods, often involving novel use of Bayesian statistics, to solve important methodological and applied problems in health policy and health services research, including the evaluation of treatments and quality of care in multiple areas of medicine. I am continuing to look at problems from multiple lenses including statistical, health policy, medical, epidemiological, and sociological perspectives. I expect to continue working on methodological problems in causal inference (comparative effectiveness research), hierarchical-multivariate modeling, social network analysis, and Bayesian analysis with specific problems often at the intersection of two or more of these areas.
Recent Publications
- “Social network correlates of free and purchased insecticide-treated bed nets in rural Uganda,” Malar J, Nov 2022
- “Patient-Sharing Networks of Physicians and Healthcare Utilization and Spending Among Medicare Beneficiaries,” JAMA Internal Medicine, Jan 2018
- “Social Environment Shapes the Speed of Cooperation,” Scientific Reports, Jul 2016