Craig Holden
Pronouns: He/Him
Craig is a senior research scientist applying mixed-methods to health services research. Craig leads the evaluation of the Delta Region Community Health Systems Development, a program designed to further strengthen and support equitable health service delivery within the eight states that make up the Delta region. The evaluation takes a mixed-methods outcomes focused approach to identify strengths, best practices, and models of success.
Craig also leads several projects for the Rural Health Equity Research Center, a partnership between NORC’s Walsh Center for Rural Health Analysis and East Tennessee State University’s Center for Rural Health Research. Among them includes a critical examination of substance use disorder, characteristics and experiences of rural Health Professional Shortage Area counties, and hospital bypass - where rural residents do not seek care at their closest hospital.
Prior to joining NORC, Craig was a senior health researcher at the Altarum Institute’s Center for Healthy Women and Children. While there, Craig directed projects for the Health Resources and Services Administration’s Maternal and Child Health Bureau and Federal Office of Rural Health Policy (FORHP), the Department of Defense Military Health Service, and the Department of Veterans Affairs. During this time, Craig also served as an Oak Ridge Institute for Science and Education (ORISE) Policy and Evaluation Fellow within HRSA’s FORHP, and worked with program management staff to develop and incorporate effective program evaluation design into an array of community and hospital based programs.
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Education
PhD
University of Maryland
MPH
George Washington University
MBA
University of Houston
BS
Texas A&M University
Honors & Awards
Outstanding Dissertation | 2016
AcademyHealth
Dean’s Scholar | 2015
University of Maryland
Project Contributions
Publications
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Substance Use Treatment Options Are Limited in Rural Areas
Press Release | May 15, 2023
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opens in new tab"Tribal Health Profession Opportunity Grants (HPOG) 2.0 Evaluation: Final Report."
Project Report | February 9, 2022
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opens in new tab"Responding to the COVID-19 Pandemic: Tribal HPOG 2.0 Grantees’ Program Adaptations."
Project Report | February 9, 2022
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opens in new tab"Key Findings from the Evaluation of the Tribal HPOG 2.0 Program, 2015-2020."
Project Report | February 9, 2022
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opens in new tab"Identifying Best Practices in Pharmacy Experience: An Analysis of Military Treatment Facilities with the Highest Pharmacy Patient Experience Scores."
Journal Article | March 23, 2021