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Edward
L. Schor
Edward L. Schor,
M.D. is Medical Director for Family and Community Health and
Medical Director for Health Policy for the Iowa Department
of Public Health. In those capacity he is responsible for
guiding clinical public health programs, including those providing
maternal and child health and family planning services, and
for helping formulate health policies and initiating new programs.
He is a general pediatrician with clinical expertise in behavioral
and received post-doctoral training in social and behavioral
sciences. He has published extensively on the health of children
in foster care, and on the family and social context of child
health. He has a special interest in the social determinants
of child health and family functioning, and has done research
and taught on child health status assessment and on the family
and how it affects children’s health. He is currently completing
a population-based, household survey of the health of children
and family in Iowa, and is developing a family strengths self-assessment
for parents of newborn infants in that state.
He is editor
of the American Academy of Pediatrics’ book, Caring for
Your School-Age Child, past chairman of that organization’s
Committee on Early Childhood, Adoption, and Dependent Care,
and presently chairs its national Task Force on the Family.
He was the founding medical director of the Chesapeake Health
Plan, an HMO for children in foster care. Subsequently, he
served as Chief of the Division of General Pediatrics at the
University of New Mexico, Director of programs in medical
education and functional outcomes and well-being of health
care for the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation in Menlo Park,
California, and Director of the Functional Outcomes Program
at The Health Institute at the New England Medical Center
in Boston. He has been a member of the faculties of several
major university medical schools including Johns Hopkins,
the University of New Mexico, Stanford, Tufts, Harvard, and
the University of Iowa, and also the schools of public health
at Johns Hopkins and Harvard Universities; he serves as adjunct
faculty in sociology at Iowa State University. He serves on
the editorial boards of the journals Pediatrics, The Journal
of the Ambulatory Pediatrics Association, and Behavioral
and Developmental Pediatrics.
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