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Christine Lundquist, MPH


Training + Education Boston University School of Public Health; Psychology, University of Pennsylvania
Gender Female
Accepted Insurances View Accepted Insurances at Tufts Medical Center

1. Wessler BS, Paulus J, Lundquist CM, Ajlan M, Natto Z, Janes WA, Raman G, Lutz JS, Kent DM. Tufts PACE Clinical Predictive Model Registry: Update 1990 through 2015. Diagnostic and Prognostic Research. Submitted, under review.

2. Leung LY, Han P, Lundquist C, Weinstein G, Thaler D, Kent D. Clinicians’ perspectives on incidentally discovered silent brain infarcts – a qualitative study. European Journal of Neurology. Submitted, under review.

3. Lavelle T, Kent D, Lundquist C, Thorat T, Cohen J, Wong J, Olchanski N, Neumann P. Patient variability rarely assessed in cost-effectiveness studies. Medical Decision Making. Submitted, under review.

4. Shahraz S, Pittas AG, Lundquist CM, Danaei G, Kent DM. Response to comment on Shahraz et al. Do patient characteristics impact decisions by clinicians on hemoglobin A1c targets? Diabetes Care. 2016 Dec;39(12):e228.

5. Shahraz S, Pittas AG, Lundquist CM, Danaei G, Kent DM. Do patient characteristics impact decisions by clinicians on hemoglobin A1c targets? Diabetes Care. 2016 Sep;39(9):e145-146.

6. Paulus JK, Lai LY, Lundquist C, Daneshmand A, Buettner H, Lutz JS, Raman G, Wessler BS, & Kent DM. A field synopsis of the role of sex in stroke prediction models. Journal of the American Heart Association. 2016 May 5;5(5).

7. Paulus JK, Wessler BS, Lundquist C, Lai LY, Raman G, Lutz JS, & Kent DM. A field synopsis of sex in clinical prediction models for cardiovascular disease. Circulation: Cardiovascular Quality and Outcomes. 2016;9(2):S8-S15.

8. Mizock L & Lundquist C. Therapy missteps with transgender clients: promoting gender sensitivity in clinical work. Psychology of Sexual Orientation and Gender Diversity. 2016;3(2):148-155.

Christine Lundquist, MPH is a Research Associate in the Predictive Analytics and Comparative Effectiveness (PACE) Center at Tufts Medical Center. She is responsible for database creation and management, grant applications and progress reports, data analysis, manuscript drafting, and general project management. Her current projects include the Clinical Prediction Model (CPM) Registry, a PCORI methods grant for external validations, Personalized Risk Information in Cost Effectiveness Studies (PRICES), a PCORI grant to prepare for and hold an HTE conference, and a PCORI dissemination grant for the development and implementation of a diabetes screening tool.

Christine has several years of experience in research. She earned a BA in Psychology at the University of Pennsylvania, where she assisted in research on substance abuse, sleep and chronobiology, and environmental reproductive toxicology. She received a Master of Public Health with a concentration in Social and Behavioral Sciences from Boston University, where her main research projects focused on dating violence, transgender mental health, and postpartum depression. Prior to joining the PACE Center in 2015, Christine worked in the Gynecologic Oncology Program at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, coordinating therapeutic clinical trials and minimal risk studies for patients with gynecologic malignancies. What brought her to PACE is her interest in studying how research results are translated to clinical practice and public health interventions.