Doug Wissoker is a nonresident fellow in the Health Policy Division at the Urban Institute. A former senior fellow in Urban’s Statistical Methods Group, he is a labor economist with expertise in statistical and survey methods. After joining Urban in 1988, he collaborated with researchers on a wide range of topics, including child care choice, evaluation of welfare reform demonstrations, Medicare payment policy, discrimination in housing and employment, physician access before and after the Affordable Care Act, survey nonresponse bias, capacity for treatment of substance use disorder, and the design of survey samples and weights.
Wissoker is studying the effects of the Medicare hospice benefit on payments and helping with the design and analysis of a nationwide survey of reproductive health care experiences and access. He was responsible for the econometric analysis for the US Department of Housing and Urban Development’s paired-testing studies of racial discrimination in both rental and sales housing, and he codeveloped the evaluation designs for studies of discrimination in rental housing based on disability, presence of children, gay and lesbian couples, transgender persons, and source of income. Wissoker is an executive in residence for the Executive Master in Public Administration program at Cornell University. He has a PhD in economics from the University of Wisconsin.
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