Michael Dulin, M.D., Ph.D.

Professor
The University of North Carolina at Charlotte

Fellowship Profile

Fellowship Year: 2020-2021
Fellowship Placement: House Committee on Energy and Commerce (Majority)
Sponsoring Institution: The University of North Carolina at Charlotte The College of Health and Human Services The Academy for Population Health Innovation (APHI)
Discipline / Profession: Medicine - Family Medicine , Public Health , Other (Please specify below): Health Analytics

Biography

Michael Dulin, MD, PhD is the Director of the Academy for Population Health Innovation at UNC Charlotte – a collaboration
designed to advance community and population health. Dulin started his career as an Electrical and Biomedical Engineer and
then received his MD/PhD studying Neurophysiology from the University of Texas Medical School at Houston. He completed his
residency training in Family Medicine and entered private practice in Charlotte, North Carolina. After working as a communitybased provider, he became the Research Director and then the Chair of the Carolinas Healthcare System's Department of
Family Medicine where he founded and directed a primary care practice-based research network (MAPPR) that has had
ongoing federal funding since 2006. Immediately prior to joining UNC Charlotte, Dulin served as an executive at Atrium Health
where he led the system's analytics center of excellence as well as their center for outcomes-based research and evaluation.
From 2020-2021, Dr. Dulin has been a Fellow at the National Academy of Medicine where he supported the U.S. House of
Representative Energy and Commerce Committee working on policy issues related to the Covid-19 pandemic, public health
data infrastructure, social determinants of health, mental health, and health information technology. His ongoing policy fellowship
is funded by The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and now focuses on bias in artificial intelligence.
Dr. Dulin is a nationally recognized leader in the field of health information technology (HIT) and application of analytics and
outcomes research to improve care delivery and advance population health. He has led projects funded by AHRQ, The Robert
Wood Johnson Foundation, The Duke Endowment, NIH, and PCORI. His technology innovations have been recognized by the
Charlotte Business Journal, NCHICA, and Cerner. His work to build a centralized data and analytics team at Atrium Health was
used by the Harvard School T.H. Chan School of Public Health as a published case study.