Xi Chen, PhD
Associate Professor of Public Health (Health Policy) and Associate Professor at Institution for Social and Policy StudiesCards
About
Research
Overview
Professor Chen currently works on the following projects:
- Leading a research team on economics of cognitive aging and Alzheimer's disease and related dementias (ADRD), using both medical claims data and survey data to investigate how cognitive aging may affect decision-making and healthcare utilization, and ADRD care quality, costs and equity;
- Leading investigations on social security reforms, retirement policies and health of the aging population;
- Leading a research team to better understand the long lasting impact of air pollution and climate change on happiness, mental health, cognitive functioning, productivity, and the economy;
- Co-leading a team to explores the linkage between the two ends of life to better understand how early childhood circumstances determine health disparities in old age;
- Evaluating major medical reforms in China that affect behavior and well-being of 1.4 billion population;
- Working on a novel transdisciplinary project, the CHALLENGE (China Longitudinal Environmental, Genetic, and Economic Cohort), that studies 30,000 children aged 0-6 years old who were recruited at conception;
- Co-leading a longitudinal household survey in rural China with a unique social network data collection to better understand social networks and health behaviors.
Medical Research Interests
Aging; Air Pollution; Alzheimer Disease; Big Data; Child; Climate Change; Cognition; Dementia; Economics; Medicare; Pensions; Retirement; Social Behavior
Public Health Interests
Aging; Community Health; Global Health; Health Economics; Health Policy; Infectious Diseases; Nutrition; Obesity; Substance Use, Addiction; Child/Adolescent Health; Health Equity, Disparities, Social Determinants and Justice; Perinatal/Prenatal Health; Pollution; COVID-19
Academic Achievements & Community Involvement
News & Links
Media
- Goal: Socioenvironmental circumstances during childhood and adulthood and behavioral factors account for a sizable proportion of differences in aging. We quantify dimensions of aging and disentangle how various factors coalesce to produce between-person differences in aging. In the long term, our studies in this area aim to draw important implications for potential interventions. We recently developed and validated a novel multi-system-based aging measure, Phenotypic Age, which has been shown to capture mortality and morbidity risk in the full U.S. population and diverse subpopulations. We also evaluated associations between a comprehensive set of factors, including childhood and adulthood circumstances, and aging outcomes for the Americans and Chinese, to determine what contribute to differences in aging measures. We also investigated inequality in health expenditures and smoking.
News
- September 23, 2024Source: Yale Daily News
Connecticut Board of Education recommends cell phone restrictions in public schools
- June 04, 2024
Early life experiences linked to racial disparities in cognition
- May 16, 2024
Air Pollution, Global Warming and Cognition
- May 06, 2024Source: Chemical & Engineering News
10 years on, Flint still faces consequences from the water crisis