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Margaret G. Stineman, MD

Margaret G. Stineman, MD

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Professor of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation
Department: Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation
Graduate Group Affiliations

Contact information
Center for Clinical Epidemiology and Biostatistics
904 Blockley Hall
423 Guardian Drive
Philadelphia, PA 19104
Office: 215-898-6272
Fax: 215-573-2017
Education:
B.F.A. ((Painting and Sculpture))
Tyler School of Art , 1974.
B.S. ((Biology))
Drexel University , 1981.
M.D.
Hahnemann University, 1983.
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Description of Research Expertise

Margaret Grace Stineman, MD

Dr. Stineman’s expertise is in statistical modeling, measurement and the development of patient classification systems. She applies mixed quantitative research and qualitative methods. She and her colleagues developed a patient classification approach that forms the basis for Medicare’s national payment system for inpatient rehabilitation, established staging systems for addressing patients’ mobility and abilities to care for themselves, established measures for addressing the effects of medical conditions on quality of life, and addressed the effect of environmental barriers on the expression of disability. Currently she and her colleagues are developing therapeutic tools for enhancing patient understanding of and involvement in the recovery process, and studying the effects of comprehensive rehabilitation services on patient outcomes following lower extremity amputation. The foundation for Dr. Stineman’s work is an expanded biopsycho-ecological model that views interactions between the person and environment as contributing to illness and disability. By this ecological framework medical interventions move beyond the person to include the environment in which he or she lives.

Research techniques:

1. The management and merging of large complex administrative databases to address policy relevant questions of relevance to the rehabilitation, care and quality of life of people with disabilities

2. Statistical methods including various forms of regression, propensity modeling, and other techniques

3. Development and application of a computerized patient empowerment tool referred to as Recovery Preference Exploration

Scientific areas of interest:

1. Self concept and disability

2. Policy changes that influence the rehabilitation and wellbeing of people with disabilities

3. Health and functional status measurement

4. Disparities

5. Independent living

6. Patient centered approaches to medicine and empowerment

7. Discordance between medical and consumer concepts of disability

8. The merging of art and science

Selected Publications

Stineman MG, Strumpf N, Kurichi JE, Charles J, Grisso JA, Jayadevapp R: Attempts to reach the oldest and frailest: recruitment, retention, and adherence of urban elderly persons to a falls reduction exercise program. The Gerontologist 51(Suppl 1): S59-72, June 2011.

Stineman, MG: The clinician's voice of brain and heart: a biopsycho-ecological framework for merging the biomedical and holistic. Topics in Stroke Rehabilitation 18(1): 55-59, 2011.

Stineman MG, Xie D, Pan Q, Kurichi JE, Saliba D, Streim J: Activities of daily living staging, chronic health conditions, and perceived lack of home accessibility features among elderly people living in the community. Journal of the American Geriatric Society 59: 454-462, 2011.

Stineman MG, Streim JE: The Biopsycho-ecological paradigm: a foundational theory for medicine. PM&R 2(11): 1035-1045, November 2010.

Stineman MG, Charles J, Kurichi J: Grading: an annotated “pen and paper” approach to multi-dimensional case-mix adjusted CQI. Topics in Stroke Rehabilitation 17(4): 262-270, 2010.

Hoenig H, Lee J, Stineman M: Conceptual overview of frameworks for measuring quality in rehabilitation. Topics in Stroke Rehabilitation 17(4): 239-251, 2010.

Stineman MG, Kwong PL, Xie D, Kurichi JE, Cowper Ripley D, Brooks DM, Bidelspach DE, Bates BE: Prognostic differences for functional recovery after major lower limb amputation: effects of the timing and type of inpatient rehabilitation services. Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation 2(4): 232-243, 2010.

Berlowitz DR, Stineman M: Risk adjustment in rehabilitation quality improvement. Topics in Stroke Rehabilitation 17(4): 252-261, 2010.

Prvu-Bettger JA, Bates BE, Bidelspach DE, Stineman MG: Short and long-term prognosis among veterans with neurological disorders and subsequent lower extremity amputation. Neuroepidemiology 32(1): 4-10, 2009.

Stineman MG, Rist PM, Burke JP: Through the clinician’s lens: Objective and subjective views of disability. Qualitative Health Research 19(1): 17-29, 2009.

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Last updated: 12/23/2011
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