

Anne Fitzpatrick
Associate Professor, Department of Agricultural, Environmental, and Development Economics, Ohio State University
Anne Fitzpatrick is an Associate Professor at the Ohio State University's Department of Agricultural, Environmental, and Development Economics. Previously she was an assistant professor of economics at the University of Massachusetts Boston. She received her dual Ph.D. in Economics and Public Policy from the University of Michigan in 2015. Her research interests focus on health care markets of developing countries and the effects of health insurance. She specializes in conducting randomized evaluations aimed at testing proposals to improve health care quality, with the ultimate goal of improving the well-being of individuals worldwide. More recent work uses rigorous econometric techniques to determine how healthcare policies affect individual financial well-being, health, and mortality.
Recent work by Anne Fitzpatrick
-
Enhancing secondary school learning: Role of remedial camps and teacher flexibility
A key dilemma in Indian education is that while children are enrolled in school, they are not actually learning. Based on an experiment in Odisha, this article explores possible solutions to the learning deficit in secondary schooling. It finds that ...
Published 30.04.24
-
Transforming teaching and learning: The role of management in implementing change
A government programme in Ghana that encouraged school principals to act as leaders to improve classroom instruction revolutionised classroom teaching and significantly enhanced student learning. The intervention boosted student performance by 30% in...
Published 02.02.24
-
The winners and losers from partial health insurance
Health insurance for families in Nicaragua had a positive impact on parents and their insured younger children, but not on uninsured older children
Published 04.01.18