Jeffrey Silber

Senior Fellow

Jeffrey Silber, MD, PhD

  • Professor, Pediatrics, Perelman School of Medicine
  • Professor, Health Care Management, Wharton School
  • Nancy Abramson Wolfson Endowed Chair in Health Services Research, Children's Hospital of Philadelphia
  • Director, Center for Outcomes Research, Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

Jeffrey Silber, MD, PhD holds the Nancy Abramson Wolfson Endowed Chair in Health Services Research at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia and is a Professor of Pediatrics and Anesthesiology & Critical Care at the University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine and a Professor of Health Care Management at The Wharton School.

    Dr. Silber is an internationally-known authority on outcomes measurement and severity adjustment for both adult and pediatric applications. He created the adult quality of care measure Failure-to-Rescue (FTR) in 1990 that has been adopted as three specific quality measures by the National Quality Forum (NQF). He has also developed two length of stay outcome measures: Prolonged Length of Stay and Conditional Length of Stay, now applied to both pediatric and adult populations. With Paul Rosenbaum, PhD, he developed the Omega measure that evaluates outcome measures by estimating the relative contribution of patient-to-hospital characteristics associated with a specific outcome, and the method of Template Matching to compare hospital cost and quality.

    He has published extensively on all aspects of the theory of outcomes measure and model development and validation, as well as the applications of outcomes measures to pressing public health issues. Much of his recent work focuses on the use of multivariate matching when comparing outcomes, specifically with respect to problems in both pediatric and adult medicine and surgery, disparities, and cancer. Dr. Silber has been awarded the Publication-of-the-Year Award in Health Services Research from AcademyHealth in 2003, 2011, and 2020. AcademyHealth is the leading professional organization of health services researchers in the U.S.

    Related Content

    Brief

    A National Comparison of Operative Outcomes of New and Experienced Surgeons

    Case-mix, not physician experience, accounts for most differences in outcomes

    By:
    • Rachel R. Kelz, Morgan M. Sellers, Bijan A. Niknam, James E. Sharpe, Paul R. Rosenbaum, Alexander S. Hill, Hong Zhou, Lauren L. Hochman, Karl Y. Bilimoria, Kamal Itani, Patrick S. Romano, and Jeffrey H. Silber