Nicholas A. Christakis

Nicholas A. Christakis
Nicholas A. Christakis

Born 1962 (1962)
Flag of the United States.svg USA
Residence Flag of the United States.svg USA
Fields Medicine and Sociology
Institutions University of Pennsylvania
University of Chicago
Harvard Medical School
Harvard University
Alma mater Yale University
Doctoral advisor Renee Fox
Doctoral students Virginia W. Chang, Elizabeth Lamont (postdoc), Lei Jin, Jack Iwashyna, Ming Wen, Damon Centola (postdoc), Wendy Cadge (postdoc), Peter DeWan, Felix Elwert, Danielle Harvey, Marcus Alexander, Weihua An, Mark Pachucki, Sam Arbesman (postdoc), Jason Block (postdoc), Rebecca Cadigan, Jessica Perkins, Niels Rosenquist (postdoc), Jukka Pekka Onnela (postdoc), Coren Apicella (postdoc)[1]

Nicholas A. Christakis (born 1962) is a Greek American physician and sociologist known for his research on social networks and on the socioeconomic and biosocial determinants of health, longevity, and behavior. He is a Professor of Medical Sociology in the Department of Health Care Policy and a Professor of Medicine in the Department of Medicine at Harvard Medical School; a Professor of Sociology in the Department of Sociology in the Harvard Faculty of Arts and Sciences; and an Attending Physician at the Harvard-affiliated Mt. Auburn Hospital.[1][2]

In 2009, Christakis and his wife, Erika Christakis, were appointed Co-Masters of Pforzheimer House, one of Harvard's twelve residential houses.[3] At Harvard, Christakis is also known for his popular undergraduate lecture class "Life and Death in the USA," which is podcast publicly, as well as for attracting a diverse group of faculty and students from across the University's departments and professional schools into his research group.

In 2009 and again in 2010, he was named by Foreign Policy magazine to its list of top global thinkers.[4] In 2009, he was named to the Time 100, Time magazine's list of the 100 most influential people in the world.[5]

He was elected to the Institute of Medicine of the National Academy of Sciences in 2006, and he was named a Fellow at the American Association for the Advancement of Science in 2010.

Contents

Education and Early Career

Christakis started his education and academic career in science and medicine. He received his B.S. in Biology from Yale University in 1984, where he ranked top among seniors majoring in the sciences, winning Yale's prestigious Chittenden Prize at the University Commencement. He then moved to Cambridge, MA where he received an M.D. from Harvard Medical School and an M.P.H. from the Harvard School of Public Health in 1989.

In 1989, Christakis moved to Philadelphia, PA, where he completed a residency in Internal Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania Medical Center and then spent four years studying medical sociology. He started his Ph.D. in Sociology at the University of Pennsylvania as a Robert Wood Johnson Clinical Scholar, and worked as an Assistant Instructor and then Instructor in the Department of Medicine. He worked with Renee C. Fox, a distinguished American medical sociologist; other members of his dissertation committee were methodologist Paul Allison and physician Sankey Williams. Christakis studied the role of prognosis in medical thought and practice, documenting and explaining how physicians are socialized to avoid making prognoses. He argued that prognoses patients receive even from the best-trained American doctors are driven not only by professional norms but also by religious, moral, and even quasi-magical beliefs (such as the "self-fulfilling prophecy").

Upon graduating in 1995, he was recruited by the University of Chicago, where he started as an Assistant Professor with joint appointments in Departments of Sociology and Medicine. His first book, Death Foretold: Prophecy and Prognosis in Medical Care, was published by the University of Chicago Press in 1999.[6] Six years after arriving at Chicago, Christakis was awarded tenure in both Sociology and Medicine. However, in 2001, Christakis left the University of Chicago to take up a position as Professor of Medical Sociology at Harvard Medical School; in 2005, he was also appointed as Professor of Sociology in the Harvard Department of Sociology; and, in 2009, he was appointed as Professor of Medicine in the Department of Medicine at Harvard Medical School.

Research

Nicholas Christakis uses quantitative methods (e.g. statistical models of network formation, social science experiments, and statistics and econometrics for large observational studies) to study social networks and other social factors that affect health. His work has spanned the fields of demography, sociology, sociobiology, behavioral genetics, and health care policy. He is an author or editor of four books, more than 120 peer-reviewed academic articles, and numerous editorials in national and international publications.

Christakis attracted international media attention in 2007 with the publication in the New England Journal of Medicine of the results of a study in Framingham, MA, which showed that obesity can spread from a person to person, through social networks, much like a virus during an epidemic.[7][8]

Over the next few years, working with a former Harvard graduate student and now Professor at UCSD, James H. Fowler, and a team of researchers in his Harvard Medical School group, Christakis published a series of articles arguing that social networks can transmit not only obesity but also other health states and behaviors, including smoking,[9][10] drinking[11] and happiness.[12] The Christakis Group at Harvard Medical School has been supported by grants from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and by the Pioneer Program of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, and by other funders. In a TED (conference) talk [2], Christakis summarizes the broader implications of the role of networks in human activity.

In 2009, his group extended the study of social networks to genetics, publishing in Proceedings of National Academy of Sciences a finding that social network position may be partially heritable, and specifically that an increase in twins' shared genetic material corresponds to differences in their social networks.[13] And in 2011, Fowler and Christakis published a follow-up paper on "Correlated Genotypes in Friendship Networks" in PNAS.[14]

In 2010, Christakis and Fowler published a paper (based on the spread of H1N1 in Harvard College in 2009) regarding the use of social networks as 'sensors' for forecasting epidemics (of germs and other phenomena),[15] beginning a program of research to deploy social networks to improve health and health care.

Books

Along with Fowler, Christakis is the author of Connected: The Surprising Power of Our Social Networks and How They Shape Our Lives, published in September 2009.[16][17] It was awarded the "Books for a Better Life" Award in 2010. Connected draws on previously published and unpublished studies, including the Framingham Heart Study, and makes several new conclusions about the influence of social networks on human health and behavior. In Connected, they put forward their "Three Degrees of Influence" rule about human behavior, which theorizes that each person's individual social influence stretches three degrees before it fades out.[18]

Christakis is also the author of Death Foretold: Prophecy and Prognosis in Medical Care (University of Chicago Press, 1999), and he has edited two clinical textbooks published by Oxford University Press.

Clinical Activities

Nicholas Christakis trained as a general internist and his current practice is exclusively in palliative medicine. He completed his residency in 1991 at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine. He was certified by the American Board of Internal Medicine in 1993. Before coming to Boston, Christakis was a home hospice physician, taking care of home-bound, dying patients. In Boston, from 2002 to 2006, Christakis worked as an attending physician on the Palliative Medicine Consult Service at Massachusetts General Hospital. In 2006, he moved to Mt. Auburn Hospital, a Harvard teaching hospital in Cambridge, MA, where he serves as an attending physician in the Department of Medicine, teaching about end-of-life care and the conduct of clinical research.

References

  1. ^ Edge, The Third Culture
  2. ^ Nicholas Christakis's Page at Harvard Medical School
  3. ^ Bita M. Asad and Ahmed Mabruk, "Christakises To Be Pfoho House Masters," The Harvard Crimson, February 17, 2009.
  4. ^ "Foreign Policy Magazine"
  5. ^ Dan Ariely, "Time 100," Time Magazine.
  6. ^ Gina Kolata, "A CONVERSATION WITH: NICHOLAS CHRISTAKIS; A Doctor With a Cause: 'What's My Prognosis?'", The New York Times, November 28, 2000.
  7. ^ N.A. Christakis and J.H. Fowler, "The Spread of Obesity in a Large Social Network Over 32 Years," New England Journal of Medicine 357(4): 370-379 (July 2007)
  8. ^ Gina Kolata, "Study Says Obesity Can Be Contagious," The New York Times, July 25, 2007.>
  9. ^ N.A. Christakis and J.H. Fowler, "The Collective Dynamics of Smoking in a Large Social Network," New England Journal of Medicine, 358(21): 2249-2258 (May 2008)
  10. ^ Gina Kolata, "Study Finds Big Social Factor in Quitting Smoking," The New York Times, May 22, 2008.
  11. ^ J.N. Rosenquist, J. Murabito, J.H. Fowler, and N.A. Christakis, "The Spread of Alcohol Consumption Behavior in a Large Social Network," Annals of Internal Medicine 152(7): 426-433 (April 2010)
  12. ^ J.H. Fowler and N.A. Christakis, "The Dynamic Spread of Happiness in a Large Social Network: Longitudinal Analysis Over 20 Years in the Framingham Heart Study," British Medical Journal 2008; 337: a2338
  13. ^ J.H. Fowler, C.T. Dawes, and N.A. Christakis, "Model of Genetic Variation in Human Social Networks," Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 106(6): 1720-1724
  14. ^ J.H. Fowler, J.E. Settle, and N.A. Christakis, "Correlated Genotypes in Friendship Networks," Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (January 2011)
  15. ^ NA Christakis and JH Fowler, "Social Network Sensors for Early Detection of Contagious Outbreaks," PLos One PLoS ONE 5(9): e12948. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0012948
  16. ^ http://www.connectedthebook.com/ J.H. Fowler and N.A. Christakis, "Connected the Book" official website
  17. ^ http://www.hachettebookgroup.com/books_9780316036146.htm "Hachette Book Group Website"
  18. ^ Clive Tomson, "Is Happiness Catching," The New York Times, September 14, 2009.

Selected writings

Social Networks

Bereavement, Caregiver Burden, Marriage and Health

Prognosis

Biological Networks

External links



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