Dr. Miller primarily focuses research on the continuum of the medication use process ranging from treatment initiation through persistence and resulting clinical outcomes. As a pharmacist for more than 36 years in clinical, management and research environments, his broad range of practical experience supports research that seeks to identify real-word, practical solutions to medication use challenges. Scholarly output from his past work includes 70 peer-previewed publications resulting in more than 2300 citations. Dr. Miller has integrated both primary and secondary data to focus study on processes, environments and interventions intended to inform ways to optimize medication use and safety. An important dimension of his past research involves the recognition of how socioeconomic disparities impact health care use and the resulting clinical and humanistic consequences of care. He has extensive experience using multivariable analytical strategies to model care processes, study predictors of health care outcomes and create classification profiles.
Associated Grants
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Identifying Longitudinal Measures of Parkinson’s Disease Progression Using Structured and Unstructured Electronic Health Record Data
2025