Research
Dr. Wolf's research bridges population health and health services research to understand how social determinants of health and healthcare access and quality contribute to infant mortality burden. As a NIH T32-funded research scholar, she received a Master of Science in Clinical Research degree at Emory’s Laney Graduate School where her research examined how maternal residential socioeconomic context and maternal sociodemographic factors influence infant mortality. She is also the Associate Director of Data Science for the Emory Collaborating Center for Maternal Infant Health where she collaborates with the Georgia Department of Public Health on research initiatives. Dr. Wolf’s NIH K12 current research focuses on “Maternal Access to Care and Infant Mortality in Georgia” to determine how maternal access to healthcare influences infant mortality, both overall and stratified by timing and cause which supports her long-term goal to become one of the few trained neonatologists bridging the gap between access to care for the mother-infant dyad and infant mortality.
Research Interest Keywords
Neonatology, Infant Mortality, Mother-Infant dyad, Health Services, Healthcare Access