https://publichealth.ouhsc.edu/About Parent Page: About id: 34447 Active Page: details id: 34448

Directory

Aizhan Karabukayeva, Ph.D., MPH
Health Administration & Policy

Aizhan Karabukayeva, Ph.D., MPH

Assistant Professor


Hudson College of Public Health
801 NE 13th St, Room 367
Post Office Box 26901
Oklahoma City, OK 73104

Aizhan-Karabukayeva@ouhsc.edu


Education:

  • PhD, Health Services Administration, University of Alabama at Birmingham, 2023
  • MPH, University of Alabama at Birmingham, 2014
  • BA, American University-Central Asia, Kyrgyzstan, 2006


Appointments:

  • Assistant Professor, Department of Health Administration and Policy, Hudson College of Public Health, University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, 2023–present


Clinical/Research Interests:

  • Dissemination and Implementation science
  • Organizational research
  • Strategic management


Select Publications:

Select Publications:

  1. Karabukayeva, A., Hearld, L. R., Kelly, R., Hall, A., & Singh, J. (2022). Association between the number of adopted implementation strategies and contextual determinants: a mixed-methods study. BMC Health Services Research, 22(1), 1-15.
  2. Hearld, L. R., & Karabukayeva, A. (2022). Participation in value-based payment programs and US acute care hospital population health partnerships. Journal of Healthcare Management, 67(2), 103-119.
  3. Karabukayeva, A., Anderson, J. L., Hall, A. G., Feldman, S. S., & Mehta, T. (2022). Exploring a Need for a Cardiometabolic Disease Staging System as a Computerized Clinical Decision Support Tool: Qualitative Study. JMIR Formative Research, 6(7), e37456.
  4. Hearld, L., Hall, A., Kelly, R. J., Karabukayeva, A., & Singh, J. (2022). Organizational context and the learning and change readiness climate for implementing an evidence-based shared decision-making aid in US rheumatology clinics. Journal of Health Organization and Management, 36(1), 121-140.
  5. Hall, A. G., Karabukayeva, A., Rainey, C., Kelly, R. J., Patterson, J., Wade, J., & Feldman, S. S. (2021). Perspectives on life following a traumatic spinal cord injury. Disability and health journal, 14(3), 101067.