University of Michigan Upon graduating from Harvard in 2011, Adler-Milstein joined the
University of Michigan School of Information as an
assistant professor with a joint appointment in the
University of Michigan School of Public Health. In this role, she led a study which found that hospitals and doctors who participate in electronic health information exchange efforts had short term success but long-term concerns. The following year, she received the
American Medical Informatics Association's 2014 New Investigator Award for "early informatics contributions and significant scholarly contributions on the basis of scientific merit and research excellence." During the 2015–16 academic year, Adler-Milstein was appointed to the Health IT Policy advisory committee to the
Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology. In this role, she would assist in making policy recommendations on the development and adoption of a nationwide health information infrastructure. She also received a 2015 Institute for Healthcare Policy and Innovation Impact Accelerator Awards for her research project "Coming down from the Tower of Babel," and the inaugural Seema S. Sonnad Emerging Leader in Managed Care Research Award. Following this, Adler-Milstein was the recipient of a grant from the
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services to study seamless care coordination of the Comprehensive End-Stage Renal Disease (ESRD) Care (CEC) Initiative. Using the grant, she would design and conduct an evaluation of the CEC Initiative using a combination of data from sources including claims, surveys, clinical quality measures, medical records, and market information. In the same month, she also earned the 2015 Early to Mid-Career Impact Accelerator Award "for her outstanding contributions to health policy and practice through her work on electronic health records and health information exchanges." Adler-Milstein later joined a government advisory committee examining ways to improve and further implement IT in the United Kingdom’s
National Health Service. By May, she was promoted to
associate professor with tenure. and received the AcademyHealth's Alice S. Hersh New Investigator Award. The following year, she received the Don Eugene Detmer Award for Health Policy Contribution in Informatics from the
American Medical Informatics Association "for her significant contributions to the field of informatics." In 2019, she was named a Member of the
National Academy of Medicine. In 2020, Adler-Milstein and Stephanie Rogers were awarded a $1 million grant from the John A. Hartford Foundation to study "the Implementation, Scaling, and Impact of the 4Ms in an IT-enabled Health System." She also led the first national hospital survey to measure the electronic health record adoptions of the Age-Friendly Health System 4Ms framework (What Matters, Medication, Mentation, and Mobility). ==References==