Dr. Mark Harrison is a health economist, epidemiologist and an Associate Professor at the University of British Columbia’s (UBC) Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences. He joined the UBC Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences and CORE team in August 2014. Prior to joining UBC, Dr. Harrison held the position of Senior Research Fellow in Health Economics, Centre for Health Economics, at the University of Manchester in the UK. He has a first class honours degree in Business and Management Sciences from the University of Bradford, an MSc from the University of Edinburgh, and a PhD in Epidemiology from the University of Manchester.
Dr. Harrison’s main research interests are in evaluating treatment outcomes in chronic diseases and understanding patient preferences in the role of treatment decision-making; he has published numerous works on the epidemiology, cost-effectiveness of treatments, and patient preferences and health-related quality of life, of those with rheumatic diseases using administrative and routinely collected data and surveys of patients. Dr. Harrison has also contributed to improving health care systems and health care delivery in Canada and the UK, through his work addressing the impact of policy interventions including medication reviews, integrated and multidisciplinary care on patient and health care system outcomes, and whether better quality management of chronic conditions in community-based primary health care, through mechanisms like incentive schemes, reduces emergency hospital admissions. More recently, Dr. Harrison has been exploring the role of patient preferences and market research techniques, including the presentation and role of risk and uncertainty in patient health care decision making, to support patient-oriented research design.
Dr. Harrison will continue to focus on chronic diseases and multimorbidity and combine these themes to improve the efficiency of the health care system in delivering timely, high quality of care, consistent with informed patient preferences, to improve patient outcomes and contain costs.
