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John K. Iglehart

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

John K. Iglehart is the founding editor of Health Affairs. He was also the national correspondent of The New England Journal of Medicine.[1] He held these two editorial leadership positions for 27 years.[2]

Education and education

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Iglehart graduated from University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee with a B.S. in Journalism. He was also a journalist-in-residence at Harvard School of Public Health, and is a founding member of the National Academy of Social Insurance.[3]

Career

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Iglehart is an elected member of the National Academy of Social Insurance and serves on the advisory board of the National Institute For Health Care Management.[1] He was an elected member in the Institute of Medicine of the United States National Academy of Sciences and served on its Governing Council between 1985 and 1991. He was also the board member of the American Board of Medical Specialties, the Educational Commission for Foreign Medical Graduates and AcademyHealth.[1]

In 2006, Iglehart was awarded the AcademyHealth Chair Award.[1]

Iglehart held several editorial positions between 1969 and 1979. Before he founded Health Affairs, he was the vice president of the Kaiser Foundation Health Plan and director of its Washington, D.C. office.[4]

In 1981, Iglehart founded a bimonthly peer-reviewed health care policy academic journal Health Affairs under the aegis of Project HOPE, a nonprofit international health education organization, leading it for 27 years.[5] The journal was called "the bible of health policy" by Washington Post[6] with more than 16 million online page views per year.[5] He stepped down from the position on September 4, 2007 and remained affiliated with the journal in an emeritus capacity.[5]

Since 1981, Iglehart had also been the national correspondent of The New England Journal of Medicine and had written more than 100 essays.[4]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d John K. Iglehart, Worldcongress.com
  2. ^ John K. Iglehart Archived 2010-12-06 at the Wayback Machine, ECRI Institute
  3. ^ Member Spotlight, National Academy of Social Insurance
  4. ^ a b John K. Iglehart Archived 2010-07-17 at the Wayback Machine, Center for Health Care Strategies, Inc.
  5. ^ a b c Iglehart to Step Down From Editorship of Health Affairs; Robinson To Become Editor-In-Chief, Health Affairs
  6. ^ Pearlstein, Steven (January 12, 2005). "Consolidation: Health Care's Empty Promise". The Washington Post. Retrieved 2009-02-06.