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Dr. Mary Ann McBurnie holds an MS and a PhD in Biostatistics from
the University of Washington. She has over ten years of experience in the
design, implementation, coordination, analysis, and dissemination of
multi-center epidemiologic studies and clinical trials. Prior to her
appointment as a CHR investigator, Dr. McBurnie served as a Research Scientist
at the University of Washington's Department of Biostatistics, and a Research
Scientist at the University of Washington's Department of Obstetrics and
Gynecology.
She has also served as a Statistical Consultant for Children's Hospital and
Medical Center in Seattle. As a CHR Investigator, she is pursuing her interests
in epidemiology and interventions for cardiovascular disease. She also provides
scientific and statistical leadership for projects involving asthma, COPD,
nutrition, and obesity. Dr. McBurnie is a NIH Cardiovascular Training Grant
recipient and serves an Ad Hoc reviewer for the American Journal of Medicine
and the Archives of Internal Medicine.
Between 1995 and 1999 Dr. McBurnie served as a Research Scientist for the
Cardiovascular Health Study (CHS), providing statistical and analytic support,
supervising coordination of ancillary studies and developing and documenting
data quality control reports and procedures. She also served as a facilitator
and collaborator with the CHS frailty working group, which developed key
concepts and published several influential articles in the field. In addition,
she served as Co-Principal Investigator for the Brachial Artery Ultrasound
Study (an ancillary study to CHS). From 1999-2005, Dr. McBurnie served as
Project Director for the Public Access Defibrillation (PAD) Trial, which
demonstrated that lay volunteers could use Automated External Defibrillators
(AEDs) safely and effectively to increase survival from out-of-hospital cardiac
arrest. Dr. McBurnie also served as a statistician for the Resuscitation
Outcomes Consortium (ROC), an NHLBI-funded network developed to evaluate field
interventions for trauma and cardiac arrest and to facilitate rapid translation
of study results to out-of-hospital practice.
Current Studies:
Recently Completed Studies:
E-mail:
Mary.Ann.McBurnie@kpchr.org
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