University of California San Francisco

Biography

Isabelle Feldhaus, MSPH, is the Program Manager for the Center for Global Surgical Studies at the University of California, San Francisco. She graduated from the University of Southern California with degrees in Global Health and Biological Sciences. She received her Master of Science in Public Health from the Johns Hopkins School of Public Health focusing on health systems in low- and middle-income countries. Isabelle has a diversity of research and programmatic experience in areas including health systems strengthening, maternal and child health, human resources for health, and tobacco control. Her previous work experiences include research projects in Tanzania through Johns Hopkins School of Public Health, advocacy and policy analysis work with the World Health Organization in Geneva, the U.S. Department of State in Washington, D.C., and Clinton Health Access Initiative in New York City. She has also acted as a consultant for Jhpiego and other research affiliated with Johns Hopkins University for economic evaluation and qualitative research. Isabelle's interests beyond global surgery also include issues surrounding health financing and insurance as well as trade and investment law as related to global health.

Education

Education

University of Southern California, B.S., Global Health, 2012

University of Southern California, B.A., Biological Sciences, 2012

Johns Hopkins School of Public Health, M.S.P.H., 2014

Fellowships

Program Affiliations

Center for Global Surgical Studies

In the News

July, 07, 2015 | Consortium of Universities for Global Health
June, 22, 2015 | UCSF Center for Global Surgical Studies
May, 01, 2015 | UCSF Center for Global Surgical Studies
April, 30, 2015 | UCSF Center for Global Surgical Studies
April, 16, 2015 | Institute for Global Orthopaedics and Traumatology
March, 31, 2015 | UCSF Center for Global Surgical Studies

Research Interests

Health Systems in Low- and Middle-Income Countries

Global Surgery

Human Resources for Health

Economic Evaluation

Health Financing