NIH Biosketch

OMB No. 0925-0001/0002 (Rev. 08/12 Approved Through 8/31/2015)
BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH
Provide the following information for the Senior/key personnel and other significant contributors.
Follow this format for each person. DO NOT EXCEED FIVE PAGES.
NAME:
Marino, Miguel
eRA COMMONS USER NAME (credential, e.g., agency login):
POSITION TITLE:
LORD8DEERJAGUARCLAW
Assistant Professor
EDUCATION/TRAINING (Begin with baccalaureate or other initial professional education, such as nursing, include postdoctoral training and residency
training if applicable. Add/delete rows as necessary.)
INSTITUTION AND LOCATION
University of California, Los Angeles
University of California, Los Angeles
Harvard University, Boston, Massachusetts
Harvard University, Boston, Massachusetts
DEGREE
(if applicable)
B.S.
M.S.
A.M.
Ph.D.
Completion Date
MM/YYYY
06/2004
06/2006
06/2008
11/2011
FIELD OF STUDY
Mathematics
Biostatistics
Biostatistics
Biostatistics
NOTE: The Biographical Sketch may not exceed five pages. Follow the formats and instructions below.
A.
Personal Statement
Dr. Marino maintains a broad statistical research program that focuses on statistical analyses of highdimensional correlated data, electronic health records, multivariate data, and longitudinal/multilevel data. Dr.
Marino is currently serving as a co-Investigator on multiple funded projects including an R01 funded by the
National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute to assess the impact of Oregon’s 2008 randomized Medicaid
insurance experiment on patients in OCHIN’s community health center network. As an assistant professor in
the OHSU Family Medicine Department, Dr. Marino maintains a broad statistical research program that
focuses on community-based and national-level population studies. As an Alonzo Smith Yerby fellow at
Harvard University, Dr. Marino received a grant to develop risk prediction models that are sensitive to capture
change in risk for intervention and preventive studies. He successfully completed doctoral and post-doctoral
projects that demonstrated his commitment to and expertise in research that addresses statistical issues
related to large-scale community-based studies and an eagerness to work in research projects that develop
population-based interventions to improve health care and quality. Because of his commitment to primary care
research, Dr. Marino currently serves as the statistical editor for the Annals of Family Medicine journal.
B.
Positions and Honors
Positions and Employment
2011-2012
Postdoctoral Fellow, Department of Biostatistics, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, MA
2012Assistant Professor, Department of Family Medicine, Oregon Health & Science University,
Portland OR
2012Assistant Professor, Department of Public Health and Preventive Medicine, Division of
Biostatistics, Oregon Health & Science University, Portland OR
Other Experience and Professional Memberships
2006Member, American Statistical Association
2010Member, American Public Health Association
2012Member, Western North American Region International Biometric Society
2013Member, North American Primary Care Research Group
2013Statistical Editor, Annals of Family Medicine
2014Board of Advisors, United Way of Columbia-Willamette Data Planning & Performance
Honors
2004-2005
2004-2006
2008
2009
2010
2010
2010
2010
2010
2012
2012
2013
California Wellness Foundation Scholarship
Graduate Student Fellowship, UCLA
Distinction in Teaching Award, Harvard University
Summer Cancer Research Training Award, National Cancer Institute
Building Future Faculty Program Award, North Carolina State University
Distinguished Student Paper Award, International Biometrics Society (ENAR)
Best Student Paper Award, American Public Health Association (Statistics)
Student Paper Award, International Chinese Statistical Association
Teaching Assistant Award, Harvard School of Public Health
Seed Grant Award, Robert Wood Johnson Foundation
Fostering Diversity In Biostatistics Workshop Travel Award, ENAR
Junior Researcher’s Workshop Travel Award, ENAR
C. Peer-Reviewed Publications (Selected from 26 peer-reviewed publications)
1. DeVoe J, Marino M, Angier H, O’Malley J, Crawford C, Nelson C, Tillotson C, Bailey S, Gallia C, Smith
J, Gold R. (2014) Expanding Medicaid for parents positively affects children’s health insurance
coverage: lessons from the Oregon experiment randomized trial. JAMA Peds, in press.
2. Angier H, Hoopes M, Gold R, Bailey S, Cottrell E, Heintzman J, Marino M, DeVoe J. (2014). An early
look at rates of uninsured safety net clinic visits after the Affordable Care Act. Annals of Family
Medicine, in press.
3. Angier H, Crawford C, O'Malley J, Tillotson C, Gallia C, Marino M, Gold R, DeVoe J. (2014). Linkage
methods for connecting children with parents in electronic health record and state health insurance
data. Maternal and Child Health Journal, 18(9):2025-33.
4. Gold R, Bailey S, O’Malley J, Hoopes M, Cowburn S, Marino M, Heintzman J, Nelson C, Fortmann S,
DeVoe J. (2013). Estimating demand for care after a Medicaid expansion: lessons from Oregon.
Journal of Ambulatory Care Management, 37(4):282-292.
5. Heintzman J, Marino M, Hoopes M, Bailey S, Gold R, Crawford C, Cowburn S, O’Malley JP, Nelson C,
DeVoe J. (2014). Using electronic health record data to evaluate preventive service utilization among
uninsured safety net patients. Preventive Medicine, 67:306-310.
6. Heintzman J, Bailey SR, Hoopes MJ, Le T, Gold R, OMalley JP, Cowburn S, Marino M, Krist A, DeVoe
JE. (2014). Agreement of Medicaid claims and electronic health records for assessing preventive care
quality among adults. Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association, 21(4): 720-724.
7. Bailey SR, O’Malley JP, Heintzman J, Marino M, DeVoe J. (2014). Receipt of diabetes preventive
services differs by insurance status at primary care visit. American Journal of Preventive Medicine, in
press.
8. DeVoe J, Crawford C, Angier H, O’Malley J, Gallia C, Marino M, Gold R. (2014) The association
between public coverage for children and parents persists: 2002-2010. Maternal and Child Health, in
press.
9. Angier H, Gold R, Gallia C, Casciato A, Tillotson C, Marino M, Mangione-Smith R, DeVoe J. (2014).
Variation in outcomes of quality measurement by data source. Pediatrics, 133(6):e1676-e1682.
10. Marino M, Li Y, Rueschman M, Winkelman J, Ellenbogen J, Solet J, Dulin H, Berkman L, Buxton O.
(2013). Measuring sleep: Accuracy, sensitivity, and specificity of a wrist actigraphy algorithm for
sleep/wake versus polysomnography. SLEEP, 36(11):1747-1755.
11. Hatch B, Angier H, Marino M, Heintzman J, Nelson C, Gold R, Vakarcs T, DeVoe J. (2013). Using
electronic health records to conduct children’s health insurance surveillance. Pediatrics, 132(6):e1584e1591.
12. Marino M, Li Y, Pencina M, D’Agostino R, Berkman L, Buxton O. (2014). Quantifying cardiometabolic
risk burden using modifiable non-self-reported risk factors. American Journal of Preventive Medicine,
47(2):131-140.
13. Jacobsen HB, Reme SE, Sembajwe G, Hopcia K, Stiles TC, Sorensen G, Porter JH, Marino M, Buxton
OM. (2014). Work stress, sleep deficiency and predicted 10-year cardiometabolic risk in a female
patient care worker population. American Journal of Industrial Medicine, 57(8):940-949.
14. White B, Carney P, Flynn J, Marino M, Fields S. (2013). Reducing hospital readmissions through
primary care practice transformation. The Journal of Family Practice, 63(2):67-73.
15. Irvine JM, Hallvik SE, Hildebran C, Marino M, Beran T, Deyo RA. (2014). Who Uses a Prescription
Drug Monitoring Program and How? Insights from a Statewide Survey of Oregon Clinicians. Journal of
Pain, 15:747-755.
D.
Research Support
Ongoing Research Support
1R01CA181452-01
DeVoe (PI)
7/1/14-6/30/2019
NIH/NCI
Community-based HIT Tools for Cancer Screening and Health Insurance Promotion (CATCHUP)
The project is a cluster randomized trial in 12 Community Health Centers to test the effectiveness of
implementing Community-based HIT Tools for Cancer Screening and Health Insurance Promotion
(“CATCHUP” tools) in improving rates of (1) cancer screening and prevention services; and (2) health
insurance coverage.
Role: Co-Investigator
CDRN-1306-04716
DeVoe (PI)
3/1/14-8/31/2015
PCORI
Accelerating Data Value Across a National Community Health Center Network (ADVANCE)
This study will accelerate efforts to build a “community laboratory” of FQHCs in which to conduct Patient
Centered Outcomes Research (PCOR). Through the ADVANCE CDRN, we will add inpatient data to our
existing outpatient data repository by partnering with health plans and hospitals caring for the same patients,
and will add community-level and patient-reported data for these FQHC patient populations.
Role: Co-Investigator
5R01HL107647
DeVoe (PI)
8/23/11-3/31/2015
NHLBI
Assessing a Medicaid Randomized Insurance Experiment with Community clinics (CARDIAC)
This innovative study will measure the impact of a statewide randomized Medicaid insurance “natural
experiment” on receipt of cardiovascular disease (CVD) primary and secondary prevention services among
established safety net clinic patients.
Role: Co-Investigator
PFA (Health Systems)
DeVoe (PI)
3/1/13 – 2/29/2016
PCORI
Innovative Methods for Patients and Clinics to Create Tools for Kids’ Care: IMPACCT Kids’ Care
The goal of the study is to develop a suite of electronic tools to bolster enrollment and retention of eligible
children in Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP) and Medicaid, then beta-test the tools by engaging
families and clinics staff in a mixed methods evaluation.
Role: Co-Investigator
R01HS18569
DeVoe (PI)
7/1/10 – 4/30/2015
AHRQ
How Do Changes in Families' Health Insurance Affect Children's Healthcare? (FAMILY)
The goal is to examine how changing patterns of family health insurance affect children’s health insurance
stability and utilization of healthcare services.
Role: Co-Investigator
K08 HS021 522 01A1
Heintzman (PI)
7/1/13 – 6/30/2017
AHRQ
The Primary Care Medical Home and Preventive Service Use in Latino Immigrants
The purpose of this project is to develop Electronic Health Record (EHR) approaches to identify immigrant
cohorts in order to assess preventive service utilization in this cohort in comparison to other demographic
groups, as well as to assess the impact of the features of primary care delivery on this utilization.
Role: Biostatistician
7R01HL107240
Buxton (PI)
7/1/14-1/31/2015
NIH/NHLBI
Evaluating cardiometabolic and sleep health benefits of a workplace intervention
This parent project evaluates an innovative Workplace intervention designed to reduce work-family conflict on
the health, particularly cardiometabolic and sleep health, of direct patient-care employees in the long-term
health care industry. This intervention is designed to decrease work-family conflict for employees, but has the
potential of increasing the organizational support for the work-family needs of mid-level managers-those
supervisors in the trenches who deal with the day to day work life and supervision of employees-leading to
improved health of these managers.
Role: Co-investigator
U19 OH010154 01
Olson (PI)
9/1/14-8/31/2015
NIOSH/CDC
Creating Health and Safety Communities of Practice for Home Care Workers (COMPASS)
The community of practice and safety support (COMPASS) study is randomized controlled trial looking at
measures of Total Worker Health (worker safety, health, and well being) among home care workers in the
Portland and Eugene metro areas. COMPASS uses a peer-led curriculum to organize home care workers into
neighborhood-based teams that provide education and social support for improving lifestyle (e.g., diet,
exercise) and safety behaviors.
Role: Co-Investigator
5R01DA031208
Deyo (PI)
2/15/12-1/31/2017
NIDA
Use of Prescription Monitoring Programs to Improve Patient Care and Outcomes
The overarching goal of this research is to help providers improve the care of complex patients requesting
controlled prescription medication. The project involves an evaluation of a newly implemented statewide
prescription monitoring program.
Role: Co-Investigator
Grant ID - #832
Melnick (PI)
9/1/08-5/31/2015
Anonymous
Effectiveness of Home Based Distribution of Hormonal Contraception for Women at Risk for Unintended
Pregnancy
The overarching goal of the study is to reduce the incidence of unintended pregnancy in at-risk women by
distributing hormonal contraceptives to them in their homes.
Role: Co-Investigator
Completed Research Support
Robert Wood Johnson Foundation
Marino (PI)
1/01/12-8/31/2013
Quantifying Change in Cardiometabolic Disease Risk
The goal of this study is to integrate novel biostatistical and epidemiological methods with cardiometabolic
expertise to develop and evaluate a cumulative cardiometabolic risk score that is optimized on modifiable risk
factors so as to detect intervention or experimental effects
Role: Principal Investigator