People
Investigators
Albert Lo, PhD
-
Albert Lo, PhD (he/him) is a child psychologist at Cambridge Health Alliance. He has research and clinical interests in the mental health and developmental needs of youth and families from marginalized backgrounds. He received his doctorate in clinical psychology from the University of Massachusetts Amherst. He completed his clinical internship at the Virginia Treatment Center for Children/Virginia Commonwealth University Medical Center and his fellowship at the Center for Multicultural Training in Psychology at the Chobanian & Avedisian School of Medicine.
Andy Hyatt, MD
-
Andrew (Andy) Hyatt, MD (he/him) is an adult psychiatrist, an Instructor in Psychiatry at the Harvard Medical School, and a Clinician Scientist (or whatever the formal title is) at the Health Equity Research Lab, as well as the medical director of the Cambridge Health Alliance Health Integration Program for psychotic disorders. He is passionate about improving the lives of individuals with serious mental illnesses. After finishing adult psychiatry residency at CHA in 2022, he was awarded the Dupont Warren Fellowship and Livingston Award through Harvard Medical School to study substance use and long-term outcomes after first episode psychosis. He was recently awarded an NIH K23 Career Development Award through the National Institute of Drug Abuse (NIDA) to study the effect of adult use cannabis legalization on individuals with schizophrenia and related conditions.
Benjamin Lê Cook, PhD, MPH
-
Benjamin Lê Cook, PhD, MPH (he/him) is Director of the Health Equity Research Lab, Vice Chair of Research, Department of Psychiatry at Cambridge Health Alliance, and Professor, Department of Psychiatry at Harvard Medical School. His research interests are in improving methods for measuring disparities, and applying these methods to understanding the mechanisms underlying mental health and substance abuse treatment disparities, the association between acculturation and mental health, and geographic differences in mental health service use disparities. He received a Ph.D. in Health Policy at Harvard University concentrating in Evaluative Science and Statistics, an MPH from UNC-Chapel Hill in the Department of Health Behavior and Health Education, and a BA in psychology from Swarthmore College.
Dharma Cortés, PhD
-
Dharma Cortés, PhD (she/her/ella) is an Assistant Professor at Harvard Medical School (HMS) and a Senior Research Scientist at the HERLab. She received her Bachelor’s degree in Psychology and a Master’s degree from the University of Puerto Rico, a Doctorate degree in Sociology from Fordham University, and completed her post-doctoral training in Medical Anthropology at HMS’s Department of Social Medicine. She has contributed as principal investigator, co-investigator and consultant to studies funded by the NIH, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, and the Robert Wood-Johnson Foundation.
Gareth Parry, PhD
-
Gareth Parry (he/him), PhD has a background in health services research and biostatistics, focusing on the evaluation of improvement & implementation initiatives, and quality & safety measurement. He currently provides analytic support to numerous HERLab projects.
Previously, he led the evaluation department, at the Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI), developing a novel mixed-method rapid-cycle evaluation approach for implementation and improvement initiatives. His early career in the United Kingdom (UK) focused on developing and applying the Clinical Risk Index for Babies (CRIB) Score, used internationally in clinical and service delivery research. He undertook similar work in pediatric and adult intensive care, becoming the founding director of the UK pediatric Intensive Care Audit Network (PICANet).
James Barrett, PhD
-
James Barrett, PhD is the Director of the Clinical Support Unit at the Cambridge Police Department and an Assistant Professor of Psychology in the Department of Psychiatry (part-time) at Harvard Medical School. He is an Associate Clinical Researcher at the Health Equity Research Lab at the Cambridge Health Alliance where he received the Academic Council Award for Excellence. Dr. Barrett is the author and developer of the Fight Navigator curriculum under the Eleanor and Miles Shore Fellowship from the Harvard Medical School to address retaliatory violence in youth. He is a member of the American Psychological Association, Association of Threat Assessment Professionals (ATAP) and the FBI’s Mass Bay Threat Assessment Team.
Jessica Stubbing, D. Clin Psych
-
Jessica Stubbing, D. Clin Psych (she/her) is a child and adolescent psychologist at Cambridge Health Alliance. Jess's research focuses on improving understanding of and response to young people's mental health and suicidal thoughts and behaviors through youth-centred, community-based and implementation science approaches. She completed her doctorate in clinical psychology at the University of Auckland and her clinical internship at Starship Children's Hospital, both in New Zealand. She received a Fulbright award to complete a fellowship at Harvard University, and later completed her post-doctoral fellowship at the Institute of Living.
Marcela Horvitz-Lennon, MD
-
Marcela Horvitz-Lennon, MD is an Associate Professor of Psychiatry at Harvard Medical School, Senior Scientist at the HERLab, and a practicing psychiatrist at CHA. She is also a Senior Physician Policy Researcher at RAND and a core faculty member of the Pardee RAND Graduate School. Horvitz-Lennon has conducted research on access to and quality of care; and place of residence; effectiveness and safety of treatments; underuse and overuse of mental health interventions; integration of physical and mental health care; diffusion of innovations; and Medicaid and federal health care policy including value-based payment. Horvitz-Lennon has served as Ad-Hoc and standing reviewer at NIH study sections and is the outgoing chair of the Clinical Data Management and Analysis (CDMA) study section. She is a member of the Clinical Guideline Writing Group of the American Psychiatric Association and served on a National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine committee that reviewed several programs in the Comprehensive Addiction and Recovery Act. She has mentored pre-doctoral students and served as member/director of Ph.D. dissertation committees, and through her clinical position, she is actively involved in medical student education and resident training. She earned her MD in Santiago, Chile, and a Masters degree in Public Health at Johns Hopkins University School of Public Health. She completed her psychiatric residency training at the University of Maryland Medical School and a fellowship in Community Psychiatry at Johns Hopkins Medical School.
Michael Flores, PhD, MPH
-
Michael Flores, PhD, MPH, is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Psychiatry at Harvard Medical School (HMS) and a Senior Scientist in the HERLab at CHA. His research employs rigorous analytic methods to inform policy development and improve the health outcomes and care quality with behavioral health disorders. Dr. Flores has two research arcs: 1) tracking national trends in behavioral health treatment and investigating the underlying mechanisms underlying; and 2) assessing the extent to which fiscal policies (Medicaid/Medicare) targeting behavioral health services impact treatment access overall. He completed a postdoctoral research fellowship at HMS/CHA, where he was awarded the Norman E. Zinberg Fellowship in Addiction Psychiatry Research from HMS. In recognition of his promise as an early-stage investigator, Dr. Flores was awarded a New Investigator Award from the National Institute on Drug Abuse and a Diversity Scholar Award from the American Society of Health Economists. He received his Ph.D. in Health Services Research from Brown University, an M.P.H. from CSUF, and BA from UCSB.
Nicholas Carson, MD, FRCP
-
Nicholas Carson, MD is an Assistant Professor in Psychiatry at Harvard Medical School and a Research Scientist at the Health Equity Research Lab. He is also Division Chief for Child & Adolescent Psychiatry at the Cambridge Health Alliance, leading services in outpatient, school-based, integrated care, and inpatient settings. Dr. Carson studies suicide prevention among minoritized youth using “big data”. His research aims to produce clinical innovations that improve the safety of underserved youth at risk for suicide. He enjoys teaching clinical scholarship to child psychiatry fellows and mentoring early career staff. Dr. Carson received his BA and MD from McGill University, completed his psychiatry residency at the University of Pennsylvania and fellowship training in Child and Adolescent Psychiatry at the Cambridge Health Alliance/Harvard Medical School.
Rajen Aldis, MD
-
Rajendra Aldis, MD is the Associate Medical Director of Research Informatics at Cambridge Health Alliance (CHA) and an Instructor in Psychiatry at Harvard Medical School. He also provides direct patient care as a board certified psychiatrist in CHA’s Primary Care Integrated Behavioral Health Program. In the CHA IT department, he has a leadership role in developing CHA’s research informatics and predictive analytics capacity. Dr. Aldis’ research interests include the application of machine learning and electronic health record data to assess and mitigate health disparities. Dr. Aldis received his MD from Dartmouth Medical School and a Master of Science in Computer Science from Northeastern University. He completed residency in adult psychiatry at Cambridge Health Alliance/Harvard Medical School, and completed his fellowship training in global mental health delivery at Harvard Medical School/Partners in Health.
Valeria Chambers, EdM, CAS, CPS
-
Valeria Chambers, (she, her, hers) EdM, CAS, CPS, is the founder of Black Voices: Pathways4Recovery, a state-wide advocacy and leadership support network for Blacks and African Americans. She uses her lived experience as a person in mental health recovery in her work as a Sr. Community Researcher at the Health Equity Research Lab, and as Peer Support Lead & Training Coordinator for the CHA Community Behavioral Health Centers. Valeria also works as a Peer Consultant at the Center of Excellence for Psychosocial and Systemic Research, MGH, and serves on the board of directors of Sankofa International, a brand new non-profit bringing Peer Support in Addictions to parts of Africa. She genuinely believes that peer support, collaboration, and community engagement can be amazing avenues for individual & systemic growth, transformation, and healing. Valeria continually looks for ways to include and amplify voices that often go unheard due to institutional and systemic racism and oppression. Her goal is to help increase access to trauma-informed, culturally responsive mental health connections for people in marginalized communities, via community engaged research, peer support, and advocacy.
Staff
Akhil Reddy, BS
-
Akhil Reddy (he/him) earned his BS in Interdisciplinary Studies (Biology, Computer Science, and Business) from the University of Pittsburgh. During his undergraduate career, Akhil worked in a variety of health-related positions, including molecular biology research, patient care for the elderly, and public policy for unintentional childhood injuries. He is passionate about data solutions and community-centered research in health equity and how these methods can bridge gaps in healthcare access
Angela Orangio, BA
-
Angela is the Business Manager of the HERLab. She has a BA in Business Administration from Boston College and has varied work experiences from business contract negotiation to direct health services and advocacy positions.
Danta Bien-Aime, MS
-
Danta Bien-Aime (she/her) has varied experience in program management, research, early childhood development, and cervical cancer prevention. She believes in strong, resilient communities with empowered, socially inclusive youth. She is also passionate about social justice. Danta is a Fulbright alumna with a Master of Medical Sciences in Global Health Delivery (MMSc-GHD) from Harvard Medical School and a Bachelor of Science in Nursing from the Episcopal University of Haiti.
Kara Nash, BS
-
Kara is a Financial Analyst at the HERLab. Since receiving her BS from St. John’s University in Queens, New York, she has held administrative positions within the healthcare field. Kara enjoys supporting the team with a wide range of financial and administrative functions.
Katie Holmes, BA
-
Katie is a Research Coordinator at the HERLab. She graduated from the University of Pittsburgh with a BS in Psychology and a BA in Sociology. In her undergrad experience she worked at the SIERA lab, researching emotion regulation, stress, and immune system interactions in older adults. She is interested in mental health research and is passionate about reducing disparities within the healthcare system.
Peyton Williams, BA
-
Peyton Williams (she/her) earned her B.A in Human Evolutionary Biology: Mind, Brain, Behavior with a minor in Economics from Harvard College. As an undergraduate, Peyton worked at the LiveWell lab at MGH researching the health impacts of a Massachusetts social needs policy on low-income individuals. She also enjoyed being a peer mental health counselor and engaging in public service. She is passionate about reducing health disparities and improving access to healthcare through evidence-based research.
Sarah Mazen, MS
-
Sarah Mazen (she/her) earned her B.S. in Health Studies from the University of Waterloo and her M.S. in Public Health Data Science from Boston University. She has gained diverse research experience throughout her academic career, working with interdisciplinary teams on various public health topics. Her research experience includes exploring physical and cognitive health among older adults, TB care pathways, and primary and preventative care use. Sarah is passionate about reducing disparities and inequities in mental health care and promoting inclusive, community-centered health research to improve healthcare access and outcomes.
Taylor Witkowski, MA
-
Taylor Witkowski, MA is the Associate Director of the HERLab with a focus on research management and operations. She has a Masters in International Development with almost 10 years of experience managing projects and conducting program evaluations in under-resourced communities. She also has a BA in Anthropology and training in mixed methods research, participatory engagement, data visualization, and digital storytelling. She enjoys working in a multi-disciplinary environment and finding impactful ways to operationalize and streamline workflows to support the HERLab in its mission to combat systemic health inequities.
Fellows & Interns
-
Lindsay is an MD-PhD student at Harvard, pursuing a PhD in Health Policy. She is interested in reducing disparities in access to mental health care, and in using machine learning techniques to predict clinical outcomes in mental health. Before medical school, she worked with Drs. Vicki Fung and John Hsu at the MGH Mongan Institute Health Policy Center as a research assistant. When not working, she loves to bake (most recently rainbow cake and earl grey tea cake), explore small restaurants with friends, and head to Oregon to play with her 2 year old niece. At the HERLab, Lindsay is focused on primarily two projects: Assessing the causal links between different treatment regimes and suicide behavior outcomes, and how we can use nationally representative household datasets to impute need for treatment into Medicaid and Medicare claims data.
-
Nikhil Rao (he/they) is pursuing a PhD in Health Policy at Harvard with a concentration in Health Policy. Prior to beginning studies at Harvard, Nikhil worked as a research analyst in the Urban Institute’s Health Policy Center. At the Urban Institute, he contributed to studies related to health care disparities in Medicare- and Medicaid-insured populations, and access to medication for opioid use disorder. Their research interests include documenting and addressing health (care) outcomes for people with current or prior involvement with the criminal legal system and harm reduction services for people who use drugs. He graduated from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in 2021 with a BS in Public Health through the Department of Health Policy and Management and a second major in Psychology.
Our lab alumni go on to do great things!
Read about them here.
Partner Organizations
-
The Center for Mindfulness and Compassion (CMC) enhances health and well-being by integrating mindfulness and compassion into healthcare and our communities with a commitment to inclusivity, accessibility, and diversity. The Center is grounded in current scientific understanding of mindfulness and compassion, and in the promotion of empirically-supported theory and practice. CMC uses mindfulness and compassion to foster an inclusive and caring community that ensures access on the basis of race, religion, ethnicity/culture, gender, sexuality, language, economic status, mental and physical ability, and literacy, recognizing that these often intersect.
-
The Cambridge Health Alliance Department of Community Health works to improve health through collaborative relationships, education and clinical services. Specific goals are to reduce health inequities, better understand health by conducting community assessments, serve as community conveners, and connect our patients and staff to services in the communities and at CHA.
-
The Division on Addiction (DOA) is committed to alleviate addiction-related social, medical, and economic burdens through research, education, training, and outreach. The Division offers encouragement, education, and training to a diverse group, including health care providers, policy makers, and scientists. The Division’s research agenda is driven, in part, by the Syndrome Model of Addiction and uses a syndrome framework to understand addiction as a cluster of symptoms and signs with multiple opportunistic expressions, as well as to test various aspects of the model and disseminate findings.



















