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IN MEMORIAM, PROFESSOR BARBARA STARFIELD

Saturday, 18th of June 2011 Print

From jhsph.edu

Barbara Starfield, Championed Importance of Primary Care

 

Barbara Starfield, professor of Health Policy and Management at the Johns Hopkins   Bloomberg School of Public Health, passed away June 10. She was 78.  Starfield died of an apparent heart attack in California while swimming in a pool—an activity she dearly loved, according to her family.

“Our School has lost one of its great leaders. Barbara was a giant in the field of primary care and health policy who mentored many of us and was greatly admired,” said Michael J. Klag, MD, MPH, dean of the Bloomberg School of Public Health.
 
Starfield was an accomplished researcher and champion of the need for a strong primary care system in the U.S. and worldwide. Her work led to the development of important methodological tools for assessing diagnosed morbidity burden, including the Adjusted Clinical Groups® (ACG®) System, the Primary Care Assessment Toolsl and the CHIP tools for assessing adolescent and child health status.

“Barbara was passionate about her life’s work and steadfast in her belief that a quality primary care system is critical to the future of health care in this country and worldwide,” said Ellen MacKenzie, PhD, the Fred and Julie Soper Professor and Chair of the Department of Health Policy and Management. “She will be missed at so many levels and by so many people.”

Originally, from Brooklyn, N.Y., Starfield attended Swarthmore College where she graduated with honors in 1954. She went on to earn her medical degree from State University of New York, Downstate Medical Center, where she graduated magna cum laude in 1959. Starfield came to Johns Hopkins in 1959 as an intern and assistant resident in pediatrics at the Harriet Lane Home at the Johns Hopkins Hospital. She joined the School of Hygiene and Public Health in 1962 where she earned her master of public health degree in epidemiology. As a professor, she went on to lead the Division of Health Policy in the Department of Health Policy and Management from 1975 to 1994. After stepping down as division head, Starfield remained an active member of the faculty and was founding director of the Primary Care Policy Center. Starfield also held an appointment as professor in the Department of Pediatrics at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine. She was named Distinguished University Professor in 1994.

Starfield was greatly admired as researcher, teacher and mentor to many colleagues, friends and students around the world. Among her many accomplishments, Starfield was the co-founder and first President of the International Society for Equity in Health, a scientific society devoted to contributing knowledge to assist in the furtherance of equity in the distribution of health. She served on many government and professional committees, including the National Committee on Vital and Health Statistics and the American Academy of Pediatrics. She was also a member of the Institute of Medicine and served on its governing council.

Starfield leaves behind her husband, Neil “Tony” Holtzman, four children and eight grandchildren.

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From www.aafp.org

In Memoriam:  Barbara Starfield, M.D., M.P.H.

By News Staff
6/15/2011

Barbara Starfield, M.D., M.P.H., of Baltimore, died June 10 at age 78. A pediatrician and renowned health services researcher, Starfield was considered a strong advocate for primary care and a friend to family medicine.

Starfield received her medical degree from the State University of New York Downstate Medical Center College of Medicine, Brooklyn, in 1959. From 1959-62, she was an intern and assistant resident at the Harriet Lane Home at the Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore, subsequently earning her master of public health degree in epidemiology from the Johns Hopkins University School of Hygiene and Public Health (now the Bloomberg School of Public Health) in 1963.

All told, Starfield's service at Johns Hopkins spanned more than 50 years and encompassed a wide range of posts in both the schools of medicine and public health, from fellow and instructor in the medical school's pediatrics department to professor in the Bloomberg School of Public Health Department of Health Policy and Management -- with a joint appointment in pediatrics -- and head of that department's Division of Public Health Policy, director of the university's Primary Care Policy Center and, ultimately, university distinguished service professor.

Starfield's work focused on quality of care, health status assessment, primary care education and equity in health, and was key in the development of such methodological tools as the Primary Care Assessment Tool and the Child Health and Illness Profile, or CHIP, tools for evaluating child and adolescent health status.

Among her many professional activities, Starfield was a fellow of the American Academy of Pediatrics; a member of the American Public Health Association, the Association for Health Services Research, and the International Epidemiologic Association; and a co-founder and the inaugural president of the International Society for Equity in Health, an organization devoted to furthering knowledge about the determinants of health inequities and how to eliminate them. She served on the governing board of the National Research Council and was elected to the Institute of Medicine of the National Academy of Sciences in 1978, later serving on its governing council. In addition, Starfield served on dozens of advisory panels for both public and private agencies.

Starfield received numerous honors and awards during her professional career, beginning with the David Luckman Memorial Award from the State University of New York Downstate Medical Center in 1958. She was honored with the HHS Secretary's Special Recognition Award in 1991 for her work on a task force to develop child health indicators, the Distinguished Investigator Award from the Association for Health Services Research and the American Public Health Association's Martha May Eliot Award in 1995, the Morehouse School of Medicine Excellence in Primary Care Award in 2002, and the AAFP's John G. Walsh Award for Lifetime Contributions to Family Medicine in 2005.

Of the more than 400 journal articles, books, book chapters, papers, editorials, reviews and other publications she authored, two of her works -- Primary Care: Concept, Evaluation, and Policy (1992) and Primary Care: Balancing Health Needs, Services, and Technology (1998) -- are considered the seminal works in the field.

In the words of Richard Roberts, M.D., J.D., an AAFP past president and the current president of the World Organization of Family Doctors, or Wonca, "Barbara was a tireless advocate for family medicine and primary care. She reminded us of why we chose to become family doctors -- to help people, improve health and make the world a better and fairer place."

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