Kristin Rising, MD, MSHP
She / Her / Hers / Herself
Professor
Director, Acute Care Transitions, Department of Emergency Medicine
Executive Director, Center for Connected Care
She / Her / Hers / Herself
Professor
Director, Acute Care Transitions, Department of Emergency Medicine
Executive Director, Center for Connected Care
Research & Practice Interests
Health Equity
Health Related Social Needs
Patient Uncertainty Related to Acute Care
Digital Health Equity
Harm Reduction for People Who Use Drugs
Vaccine Confidence
Education
MD, University of California, San Francisco
MSHP, University of Pennsylvania
BA, Yale University
Publications
- “Addressing barriers to digital health readiness among a Latino population”
- Perspectives from patients with chronic lung disease on a telehealth-facilitated integrated palliative care model: a qualitative content analysis study
- “Once I take that one bite”: the consideration of harm reduction as a strategy to support dietary change for patients with diabetes
- Long COVID among Undocumented Latino Immigrant Populations in the Emergency Department
- Reenvisioning Title X to Meet Early Pregnancy Needs
BIOGRAPHY
Dr. Rising is a clinician scientist who serves as Founding Executive Director of the Jefferson Center for Connected Care and Professor in the Department of Emergency Medicine at Sidney Kimmel Medical College, with secondary appointments in the College of Population Health and the College of Nursing at Thomas Jefferson University. She completed medical school at the University of California San Francisco, emergency medicine residency training at Boston Medical Center, and received a Masters of Science in Health Policy Research at the University of Pennsylvania.
Dr. Rising’s mission is to transform the patient voice into evidence-based interventions that are designed to address unmet needs that impact health outcomes of vulnerable individuals and communities. She has served as PI for multiple grants from foundations, the Patient Centered Outcomes Research Institute (PCORI), the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ), and the National Institutes of Health (NIH). She is also a core faculty member for a HRSA-funded T32 program focused on developing researchers focused on telehealth, mental health, and addiction medicine. Her current research portfolio includes addressing patient uncertainty related to seeking care, developing novel approaches to reduce the impact of social determinants of health on patient outcomes, promoting digital health equity, promoting vaccine confidence among vulnerable populations, and supporting harm reduction for people who use drugs in both community and health care settings.