
Grant Miller, PhD, MPP
Assistant Professor of Medicine; Assistant Professor, by courtesy, of Economics and of Health Research and Policy and CHP/PCOR Core Faculty MemberCHP/PCOR
Stanford University
117 Encina Commons
Stanford, CA 94305-6019
Research Interests
strategies to improve health and reduce mortality in poor countries; the economic benefits of health improvement; determinants of fertility and the impact of family-planning programs in developing countries
Grant Miller's Curriculum Vitae (23.0KB, modified July 2009)
Personal Web Page
Grant Miller, PHD, MPP, is an Assistant Professor of Medicine at the Stanford School of Medicine, a Core Faculty Member at the Center for Health Policy/Primary Care and Outcomes Research, and a Faculty Research Fellow at the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER). He is also a Faculty Fellow of the Stanford Center for International Development and a Faculty Affiliate of the Stanford Center for Latin American Studies. His primary areas of interest are health and development economics and economic demography.
Miller's current research focuses broadly on behavioral obstacles to health improvement in developing countries. One line of studies investigates household decision-making underlying puzzlingly low adoption rates of highly efficacious health technologies (like point-of-use drinking water disinfectants and improved cookstoves) in many poor countries. Another vein of research investigates misaligned macro- and micro-level incentives governing the supply of health technologies and services. He has conducted these and other research projects at institutions including the National Bureau of Economic Research, the Urban Institute, and the University of California-San Francisco's Institute for Health Policy Studies. He received a BA in psychology from Yale College, a master's degree in public policy from the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University, and a PhD in health policy/economics also from Harvard.
Other affiliations
National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER);
Stanford Center for International Development;
Stanford Center for Latin American Studies
Publications
Women's Suffrage, Political Responsiveness, and Child Survival in American History
Grant Miller
Quarterly Journal of Economics vol. 123, 3 (2008)
Evidence on Early-Life Income and Late-Life Health from America's Dust Bowl Era
David Cutler, Grant Miller, DM Norton
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America vol. 104, 33 (2007)
The Role of Public Health Improvements in Health Advances: The Twentieth Century United States
David Cutler, Grant Miller
Demography vol. 42, 1 (2005)
Events & Presentations
The 5 most recent are displayed. More events & presentations »
- Stanford Health Policy Panel on Evaluating Healthcare Quality and Outcomes
July 27, 2009 CHP/PCOR Seminar Series
Nomita Divi, Jeremy Goldhaber-Fiebert, Grant Miller
Supply- vs. Demand-Side Rationing in Developing Country Health Insurance: Evidence from Colombia's 'Régimen Subsidiado'
February 11, 2009 CHP/PCOR Research in Progress Seminar
Grant Miller- Health Insurance for the Poor in Latin America: Experience with Colombia's "Subsidized Regime"
April 16, 2008 CHP/PCOR Research in Progress Seminar
Grant Miller - How Governance Influences Health and Technology in Myanmar, Mexico, China, Iraq and the Progressive Era in the U.S.
January 22, 2008 CHP/PCOR, CDDRL Workshop
Grant Miller, Matthew Kohrman, Krista Donaldson, Alberto Diaz-Cayeros - The Overlooked Orphans: The Size of the Impact of AIDS on the Orphaned Elderly in sub-Saharan Africa
January 9, 2008 CHP/PCOR Research in Progress Seminar
Tim Kautz, Jay Bhattacharya, Grant Miller
Research Programs & Projects
- Causes and Consequences of Indoor Air Pollution: An Experimental Investigation in Bangladesh
CHP/PCOR, CHPINTL Project - Health Improvement under Mao and Its Implications for Contemporary Aging in China
CHP/PCOR Project - Health Insurance among the Elderly in Colombia
CHP/PCOR Project (Completed) - The HIV/AIDS Pandemic and Africa's Orphaned Elderly
CHP/PCOR Project (Completed)



