Bio: Colin F. Tukuitonga, D.S.M., a 2000-01 Commonwealth Fund Harkness Fellow in Health Care Policy, is director of the Pacific Health Research Centre, chief of the Division of Public Health, Primary Health Care and Mental Health in the School of Medicine, and senior lecturer in Community and Pacific Health at the University of Auckland. He is also a practicing physician. He has dual fellowships in general practice (family medicine) and public health medicine. Tukuitonga's research interests include access to and quality of primary care, health issues affecting Pacific peoples, child health, and health services effectiveness. He has served on a number of New Zealand Government Working Parties that address a variety health policy topics. He recently served as a member of the Ministerial Advisory Committee on Health and Disability Support Services and as chairman of the Pacific Committee of the Health Research Council of New Zealand. Based at San Francisco General Hospital during his Harkness Fellowship, Tukuitonga is comparing U.S. and New Zealand strategies to reduce disparities in health outcomes for minorities
Placement: University of California
Mentors: Andrew Bindman, M.D.
Project: Reducing Ethnic Disparities in Health Status and Inequities in the Use of Health Care Services: A Comparison between New Zealand and the United States
Description: Tukuitonga compared policy frameworks and programs designed to reduce ethnic disparities in health in New Zealand and the U.S., focusing in particular on health care. He reviewed policies in both countries, and conducted interviews with key informants, site visits, observations, and a literature review. He also conducted quantitative analyses using methods developed in the U.S. to assess New Zealand health care disparities in avoidable hospitalizations for common chronic conditions and in the use coronary artery revascularization procedures.