Jon D. Lurie, MD, MS
Title(s)
Professor of Medicine
Professor of Orthopaedics
Professor of The Dartmouth Institute
Department(s)
Medicine
Orthopaedics
The Dartmouth Institute
Education
1996 - 97: Dartmouth College, Center for Evaluative Clinical Sciences, MS
1987 - 92: Stanford University School of Medicine, MD
1985 - 86: Pennsylvania State University: Premedical requisites
1981 - 85: Princeton University, BSE, Geological Engineering
Postdoctoral Training
1996 - 99: VA Faculty Development Fellowship Medicine
VA Medical Center, White River Junction, VT
Programs
SYNERGY
The Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice
Curriculum Vitae
Lurie_J_CV_2023-04-07.doc
NIH Biosketch
Lurie_J_BIO_2023-04-07.pdf
Websites
https:
https:
http:
https:
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Contact Information
DHMC
One Medical Center Drive
Lebanon NH 03756
Phone: 603-650-8380
Fax: 602-653-3558
Email: jon.d.lurie@dartmouth.edu
Acceptability and Feasibility of Delivering Decision Aids to Veterans for Management of Knee Osteoarthritis - A Pilot Study. A Regional Analysis of Low Back Pain Treatments in the Military Health System. Improving care for individuals with serious infections who inject drugs. Association between cervical artery dissection and spinal manipulative therapy -a medicare claims analysis. Development of a mapping function ("crosswalk") for the conversion of scores between the Oswestry Disability Index (ODI) and the Core Outcome Measures Index (COMI). Correction to: Pilot comparative effectiveness study of surface perturbation treadmill training to prevent falls in older adults. Spinal Manipulation vs Prescription Drug Therapy for Chronic Low Back Pain: Beliefs, Satisfaction With Care, and Qualify of Life Among Older Medicare Beneficiaries. Long-Term Medicare Costs Associated With Opioid Analgesic Therapy vs Spinal Manipulative Therapy for Chronic Low Back Pain in a Cohort of Older Adults. Initial Choice of Spinal Manipulation Reduces Escalation of Care for Chronic Low Back Pain Among Older Medicare Beneficiaries. Orthopedic disease burden in adult patients with symptomatic lumbar scoliosis: results from a prospective multicenter study. |