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Prior to coming to Minnesota, Sainfort
was the associate dean for
interdisciplinary programs in the College of
Engineering at Georgia Tech, director of the
Health Systems Institute, a collaborative
initiative at Georgia Tech and Emory
University, and the William W. George
professor of health systems in the Wallace
H. Coulter Department of Biomedical
Engineering at Georgia Tech and Emory
University School of Medicine. He also held
appointments as a professor in the School of
Industrial and Systems Engineering and the
College of Management at Georgia Tech.
Sainfort's research and expertise focus
on medical decision making under risk and
uncertainty, health outcomes modeling and
measurement, health risk perception and
assessment, health status assessment and
monitoring, and health-related performance
measurement and analysis. Examples of these
issues include patients facing choices about
cancer treatment, health care administrators
deciding whether to invest in costly medical
technology, and policymakers weighing issues
of how to best invest taxpayer money for
prevention strategies.
Sainfort has published more than 130
refereed publications and has served as
principal investigator on more than $13
million in contracts and grants. He is an
editorial board member for several leading
journals and periodically reviews
manuscripts for many other journals. He has
served as chair of several conferences and
has served on numerous scientific and/or
organizing committees for several
professional societies. He also is an expert
consultant for the health care industry. His
clients include health care delivery
organizations, medical devices companies,
clinical laboratories, and pharmaceutical,
insurance, and information technology
companies.
Selected Publications
Sainfort F et al. (Eds.). Operations
Research and Systems Science in Healthcare
Delivery Systems: An International Study,
New York, NY: Kluwer Academic Publishers, in
preparation.
Brandeau M, Sainfort F, and W Pierskalla
(Eds). Operations Research and
Health Care: Handbook of Methods and
Applications, New York, NY: Kluwer
Academic Publishers, 2004.
Korunka C., D. Scharitzer , P. Carayon,
P. Hoonakker, A. Sonnek, and F. Sainfort.
Customer Orientation among Employees in
Public Administration: A transnational,
Longitudinal Study, Applied Ergonomics,
38:307-315, 2007.
Scott, I. U., Jacko, J. A., Sainfort, F.,
Leonard, V. K., Kongnakorn, T., & Moloney,
K. P. The impact of auditory and haptic
feedback on computer task performance in
patients with Age-related Macular
Degeneration and control subjects with no
known ocular disease, Retina,
26(7), 803-810, 2006.
Moloney, K. P., Emery V. K., Shi B.,
Jacko J. A., Vidakovic B., & Sainfort F.
Leveraging data complexity: Pupillary
behavior of older adults with visual
impairment during HCI. Transactions on
Computer-Human Interaction (TOCHI), in
press, 2006.
Shi, B., Moloney, K. P., Pan, Y., Emery,
V. K., Vidakovic, B., Jacko, J. A., &
Sainfort F. Wavelet classification of high
frequency pupillary response. Journal of
Statistical Computation and Simulation,
76(5):431-446, 2006.
Jacko, J. A., Barnard, L., Yi, J. S.,
Edwards, P. J., Emery, V. K., Kongnakorn,
T., Moloney, K. P., & Sainfort, F. Empirical
validation of the Windows® accessibility
settings and multimodal feedback for a menu
selection task for users with diabetic
retinopathy. Behaviour & Information
Technology, 24(6):419-434, 2005.
Beasley JW, B Karsh, ME Hagenauer, L
Marchand, F Sainfort. What is the Quality of
Work Life of Independent Versus Employed
Family Physicians in Wisconsin? A WReN
Study. Annals of Family Medicine,
3:500-506, 2005.
Jacko, J. A., Moloney, K. P., Kongnakorn,
T., Barnard, L., Edwards, P. J., Emery, V.
K., & Sainfort, F. Multimodal feedback as a
solution to ocular disease-based user
performance decrements in the absence of
functional vision loss, International
Journal of Human-Computer Interaction,
18(2):183-218, 2005.
Edwards, P. J., Barnard, L., Leonard, V.
K., Yi, J.S., Moloney, K. P., Kongnakorn,
T., Jacko, J. A. & Sainfort, F.
(in-press) Understanding Users with Diabetic
Retinopathy: Factors That Affect
Performance in a Menu Selection Task.
Behaviour & Information Technology,
24(3): 175-186, 2005.
Sainfort F, Karsh B, and Booske BC. Job
and organizational determinants of nursing
home employee commitment, job satisfaction
and intent to turnover, Ergonomics,
49(10):1260-1281, 2005.
Jacko, J. A., Barnard, L., Kongnakorn,
T., Moloney, K. P., Edwards, P. J., Emery,
V. K., Sainfort F. Isolating the effects of
visual impairment: Exploring the effect of
AMD on the utility of multimodal feedback,
CHI Letters, 6(1), 311-318, 2004.
Jacko, J. A., Emery, V. K., Edwards, P.
J., Ashok, M., Barnard, L., Kongnakorn, T.,
Moloney, K. P., Sainfort, F., Scott, I. U.
The effects of multimodal feedback on older
adults’ task performance given varying
levels of computer experience, Behaviour
& Information Technology, 23(4),
247-264, 2004.
Beasley JW, B Karsh, F Sainfort, ME
Hagenauer, L Marchand What is the Quality of
Work Life of Family Physicians in
Wisconsin’s Health Care Organizations?
A WReN Study, Wisconsin Medical Journal,
103(6):51-55, 2004.
Professional Experience
2007 – Present, Mayo Professor and
Division Head, Division of Health Policy and
Management, School of Public Health,
University of Minnesota, Minnesota, U.S.A.
2003 – 2007, Associate Dean for
Interdisciplinary Programs (Research),
College of Engineering, Georgia Institute of
Technology, Georgia, U.S.A.
2005 – 2007, Founding Director, Institute
for Health Systems Engineering, College of
Engineering, Georgia Institute of
Technology, Georgia, U.S.A.
2002 – 2007, William W. George Professor
of Health Systems, Georgia Institute of
Technology, Georgia, U.S.A.; Adjunct
Professor, College of Management, Georgia
Institute of Technology, Georgia, U.S.A.
2005 – 2007, Professor, Wallace H.
Coulter Department of Biomedical
Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology
and Emory University, Georgia, U.S.A.
Summer 2002, Visiting Professor, Georgia
Tech Lorraine, Georgia Institute of
Technology, Metz, France.
2000 – 2007, Professor, School of
Industrial and Systems Engineering, Georgia
Institute of Technology, Georgia, U.S.A.;
Director, Health Systems Research Center,
Georgia Institute of Technology, Georgia,
U.S.A.
1999 – 2000, Professor, Department of
Industrial Engineering and Department of
Preventive Medicine, University of
Wisconsin-Madison Madison, Wisconsin,
U.S.A.; Director, Center for Quality and
Productivity Improvement, University of
Wisconsin-Madison Madison, Wisconsin, U.S.A.
1997 – 1999, Associate Professor,
Departments of Industrial Engineering and
Preventive Medicine, Center for Health
Systems Research and Analysis, and Center
for Quality and Productivity Improvement,
University of Wisconsin-Madison Madison,
Wisconsin, U.S.A.
1995 - 1997, Associate Professor,
Department of Industrial Engineering, Center
for Health Systems Research and Analysis,
and Center for Quality and Productivity
Improvement, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Madison, Wisconsin, U.S.A.
1995 - 1997, Visiting Professor, Ecole
Nationale Supérieure de Génie Industriel,
Institut National Polytechnique de Grenoble,
Grenoble, France (one course per year).
1988 - 1995, Assistant Professor,
Department of Industrial Engineering and
Center for Health Systems Research and
Analysis, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Madison, Wisconsin, U.S.A.
1990 - 1993, Visiting Professor, MBA
Program, THESEUS, Sophia Antipolis, France
(one course per year).
1987 - 1988, Visiting Assistant
Professor, Department of Industrial
Engineering, University of
Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, Wisconsin,
U.S.A.
Honors
1986, Stoelting Award in Management of
Technology (Best dissertation research in
management of technology)
1993, Joseph Orlicky Award for the Best
Innovation in Manufacturing and Service
Operations, delivered by the Production and
Operations Management Society (POMS)
2002, William W. George Professor of
Health Systems, Georgia Institute of
Technology
2005, University Leadership Fellow,
Georgia Institute of Technology
2007, Mayo Professor, University of
Minnesota
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