Sherry Lin, PhD, MPH
Instructional Associate Professor Health Policy & Management | School of Public Health- 979.436.9450
- sslin@tamu.edu
-
212 Adriance Lab Rd., 1266 TAMU
College Station, TX 77843-1266
Education
- PhD, Health Services Research Texas A&M University
- MPH, Health Policy & Management Texas A&M University, School of Public Health
- BS, Biomedical Science Texas A&M University
Research Interests
- Preventive care services
- Disabilities research
- Vulnerable population
Websites
Publications
2015 Concealed Handgun Licensing and Crime in Four States
Phillips, C. D., Nwaiwu, O., Lin, S., Edwards, R., Imanpour, S., & Ohsfeldt, R. (2015). Concealed handgun licensing and crime in four states. Journal of Criminology, 2015, Article ID 803742. https://doi.org/10.1155/2015/803742
2014 Is Diabetes Color-Blind? Growth of Prevalence of Diagnosed Diabetes in Children Through 2030
Adepoju, O., Bolin, J., Booth, E., Zhao, H., Lin, S., Phillips, C., & Ohsfeldt, R. (2014). Is diabetes color-blind? Growth of prevalence of diagnosed diabetes in children through 2030. Population Health Management. (Published online ahead of print)
2014 Measures of Success: The Role of Human Factors in Lean Implementation in Health Care
Lorden, A. L., Zhang, Y., Lin, S., & Côté, M. J. (2014). Measures of success: The role of human factors in Lean implementation in health care. Quality Management Journal, 21(3), 26–37.
2013 Discharge Phone Calls: A Technique to Improve Patient Care During the Transition from Hospital to Home
Schuller, K., Lin, S., Gamm, L., & Edwardson, N. (2013). Discharge phone calls: A technique to improve patient care during the transition from hospital to home. Journal for Healthcare Quality. (Published online ahead of print)
2013 When Concealed Handgun Licensees Break Bad: Criminal Convictions of Concealed Handgun Licensees in Texas, 2001–2009
Phillips, C. D., Nwaiwu, O., Moudouni, D. K., Edwards, R., & Lin, S. (2013). When concealed handgun licensees break bad: Criminal convictions of concealed handgun licensees in Texas, 2001–2009. American Journal of Public Health, 103(1), 86–91.