Autism Consortium of Texas November Webinar - Using Population Data to Inform Autism Policy

Event Status
Scheduled
ACT LEND Logo: Blue outline of Texas with maroon and hunter green human figures reaching for a burnt orange star and holding hands a burnt orange figure in wheelchair; ACT LEND text right justified on logo
Flyer for the Autism Consortium of Texas; Title: Using Population Data to Inform Autism Policy; Presented by Paul Shattuck, Ph.D., MSSW; Date of event is Monday, November 7, 2022 from 2-3:30PM CT; One CEU can be earned for this event. Register for the event a the following URL: https://tinyurl.com/ACT-Nov2022

 

Monday, November 7, 2022

2:00-3:30 CT

1 Free CEU (SW, LPC, LMFT)

Register for the Zoom webinar at https://tinyurl.com/ACT-Nov2022

Paul Shattuck, PhD, MSSW, is a Senior Fellow at Mathematica. He is a nationally recognized expert in autism spectrum disorders, and he pioneered the understanding of autism in adulthood and the measurement of autism outcomes. His other research interests include improving community systems and services, understanding the long-range impact of social determinants of health and examining the intersection of climate change and public health.

Dr. Shattuck is currently focused on approaches for measuring and improving the performance and equity of systems of care for vulnerable populations using collaborative community engagement. He is also collaborating with foundations on a range of health and disability topics. An abiding passion of his is helping translate scientific findings into useful guidance for policy and practice in the areas of health and social services. He is also a member of Mathematica's Equity Community of Practice. 

Before joining Mathematica in 2020, Shattuck was a professor at Drexel University, where he was the founding leader of the A.J. Drexel Autism Institute’s Life Course Outcomes Program, the National Autism Data Center, and the Transition Pathways Community Partnership Initiative. He oversaw an integrated strategy for conducting, translating, and disseminating research to improve community-based services and inform national policies aimed at helping teens and adults on the autism spectrum. He also trained in methods of public health surveillance and epidemiology as a postdoctoral fellow funded by the National Institutes of Health at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and was a professor at Washington University in St. Louis. Before his academic career, Shattuck worked in social services doing tenant organizing, developing affordable housing, and designing programs for vulnerable populations—including homeless youth and families, migrant farmworkers, preschool children, and incarcerated men. Dr. Shattuck has a Ph.D. in social welfare from the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

Date and Time
Nov. 7, 2022, 2 to 3:30 p.m.