Scott Siegel, Ph.D, MHCDS

Director of Cancer Control & Population Sciences ChristianaCare

  • Wilmington DE

Scott Siegel, Ph.D., MHCDS, is a licensed psychologist and the Director of Cancer Control & Population Sciences at ChristianaCare.

Contact

ChristianaCare

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Biography

Scott Siegel, Ph.D., MHCDS is a licensed psychologist and the Director of Cancer Control & Population Sciences within the Helen F. Graham Cancer Center & Research Institute at ChristianaCare. In this role, Dr. Siegel works collaboratively with multidisciplinary teams in the health system and with government, academic, and community-based partners to reduce the overall burden of cancer and advance health equity.

Areas of Expertise

Cancer and Behavioral Health
Population Health Research
Behavioral Health Determinants
Psychchology
Social Health Determinants
Psychosocial Oncology
Research Education

Education

Dartmouth College

Master of Health Care Delivery Science

2018

University of Miami

Ph.D

Clinical Health Psychology

2007

University of Miami

MS

Clinical Health Psychology

2003

Media Appearances

COVID-19 testing and Population Health Research

New Castle County Government Facebook Live  online

County Executive Matt Meyer is joined by ChristianaCare’s Dr. Scott Siegel at our #COVID19 testing site at Conrad Schools of Science to discuss the County’s testing initiative.

Our Wilmington University site has been closed because of thunderstorm risks and the Conrad site has been moved indoors. Anyone registered for Wilmington University is welcome to come to Conrad instead or any of our other sites this weekend or next week.

To view sites and register, visit Delaware.curativeinc.com

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Coping After Breast Cancer

UDAILY  online

2020-05-12

Shortly after arriving at UD in 2005, Laurenceau began collaborating with Scott Siegel, a clinical health psychologist who practices in the cancer center and director of Population Health Research at ChristianaCare’s Value Institute. Laurenceau and Siegel noticed that fear of cancer recurrence was a common clinical problem reported by cancer patient...

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Christiana Care doctors examine gene editing to improve patient response to lung cancer treatments

Delaware Public Media  online

2018-04-16

Scott Siegel, the director of population health psychology at Christiana Care’s Value Institute, says doctors want to reduce the burden of lung cancer on members in the community...

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Selected Papers and Publications

The co-occurrence of smoking and alcohol use disorder in a hospital-based population: Applying a multimorbidity framework using geographic information system methods Authors

Addictive Behaviors

2021
Tobacco and alcohol use are leading causes of premature mortality in the US and concurrent use is associated with even greater health risks. A cross-sectional study of 20,310 patients admitted to a Mid-Atlantic acute health care system between July 1, 2018 and June 30, 2019 were categorized according to smoking and alcohol use disorder (AUD) status.

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Characterizing the spatial relationship between smoking status and tobacco retail exposure: Implications for policy development and evaluation

Health & Place

2021
Tobacco retail density and smoking prevalence remain elevated in marginalized communities, underscoring the need for strategies to address these place-based disparities. The spatial variation of smokers and tobacco retailers is often measured by aggregating them to area-level units (e.g., census tracts), but spatial statistical methods that use point-level data, such as spatial intensity and K-functions, can better describe their geographic patterns.

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Operationalizing the Population Health Framework: Clinical Characteristics, Social Context, and the Built Environment

Population Health Management

2020-10-13

As a framework, population health emphasizes health outcomes for entire populations, the broad range of determinants of these outcomes, and the comparative effectiveness of medical and public health interventions. In practice, however, many contemporary population health programs instead focus on small subsets of patients who account for a disproportionate share of health care utilization, often with disappointing results.

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