UMBC’s CIDER Program Supports New Hilltop Institute-led Medicaid Study, Other Cross-collaborative Projects
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Author/Creator ORCID
Date
2025-05-02
Department
Program
Citation of Original Publication
Fraser, Adriana. “UMBC’s CIDER Program Supports New Hilltop Institute-Led Medicaid Study, Other Cross-Collaborative Projects” UMBC News. May 2, 2025. https://umbc.edu/stories/cider-program-hilltop-medicaid-study/.
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Subjects
Research
public health
UMBC Earth and Space Institute (ESI)
UMBC Goddard Earth Sciences Technology and Research (GESTAR) II
UMBC Computer Science and Electrical Engineering Department
UMBC Center for Space Sciences and Technology (CSST) / Center for Research and Exploration in Space Sciences & Technology II (CRSST II)
UMBC Center for Advanced Sensor Technology (CAST)
Anin Puthukkudy
Vanderlei Martins
Jessica Sutton
Tejas Gokhale
Thomas Stanley
Kaur Kullman
Alan Sherman
Roberto Yus
Enis Golaszewski
Morgan Henderson
Jun Chu
Venkatesh Srinivasan
Tyler Josephson
Don Engel
A. All Hilltop Institute (UMBC) Works
public health
UMBC Earth and Space Institute (ESI)
UMBC Goddard Earth Sciences Technology and Research (GESTAR) II
UMBC Computer Science and Electrical Engineering Department
UMBC Center for Space Sciences and Technology (CSST) / Center for Research and Exploration in Space Sciences & Technology II (CRSST II)
UMBC Center for Advanced Sensor Technology (CAST)
Anin Puthukkudy
Vanderlei Martins
Jessica Sutton
Tejas Gokhale
Thomas Stanley
Kaur Kullman
Alan Sherman
Roberto Yus
Enis Golaszewski
Morgan Henderson
Jun Chu
Venkatesh Srinivasan
Tyler Josephson
Don Engel
A. All Hilltop Institute (UMBC) Works
Abstract
UMBC researchers are collaborating on a study that takes a closer look at specific diagnosis coding patterns that focus on societal factors that potentially influence the health of Maryland’s Medicaid recipients. Morgan Henderson, director of analytics and research at UMBC’s The Hilltop Institute, and Jun Chu, assistant professor of public health, are among the five cross-collaborative teams selected to receive funding from UMBC’s Center and Institute Departmentally-Engaged Research (CIDER) program. Henderson and Chu’s CIDER-supported project will investigate potential “z code” patterns of the state’s Medicaid recipients. Z codes are a set of diagnosis codes that refer to factors influencing a patient’s health status beyond diseases or injuries, called social determinants of health.