David Kanouse, Ph.D.
Senior Behavioral Scientist
RAND
1776 Main Street
Santa Monica, CA 90407-2138
(310) 393-0411 Fax (310) 451-6957
david_kanouse@rand.org
David E. Kanouse, Ph.D., Co-Director of the Prevention and Treatment Services Core of CHIPTS, is a social psychologist who has extensive experience conducting research on HIV health care delivery. He is Principal Investigator of an NIMH-sponsored study on improving medical treatment for seriously mentally ill HIV+ persons, On the HIV Cost and Services Utilization Study (HCSUS), he leads a research team that is examining knowledge, attitudes, and behaviors of persons receiving care for HIV illness, with the goal of illuminating patient variables that affect patterns of utilization. Dr. Kanouse has collaborated in research on quality of care for HIV illness (Mathews and Kanouse, 1997) and on health-related quality of life of persons enrolled in AIDS clinical trials (Bozzette et al, 1994a, 1994b, 1995a, 1995b, 1996; Cunningham et al., 1995). He is Principal Investigator of a study funded by the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development that is examining HIV-related risk and prevention behaviors among HIV+ persons in the HCSUS cohort. He co-authored chapters on health services research and on economic evaluation of prevention programs for a forthcoming monograph on adolescents and sexually transmitted diseases sponsored by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases and the Rockefeller Foundation. In earlier work, he directed an evaluation of a high school condom availability program (Schuster et al., 1997, 1998).
Dr. Kanouse is experienced at conducting complex evaluations, including an evaluation of the National Institutes of Health Consensus Development Program (Kanouse et al., 1989). He has served as an Associate Editor of Evaluation Review (1991-1993) and is a former member of NIH AIDS and Related Research Study Section 6. He has served on the Board of Directors of the Santa Monica AIDS Project, the Scientific Advisory Committee of the American Foundation for AIDS Research, and the Behavioral and Social Sciences Research Planning Committee of the Office of AIDS Research, NIH.
* Kanouse DE, Winkler JD, Kosecoff J, Berry SH, Carter GM, Kahan J P, McCloskey L, Rogers WH, Winslow CM, Anderson GM, Brodsley L, Fink A, Meredith L, Brook RH. (1989). Changing medical practice through technology assessment: An evaluation of the NIH Consensus Development Program. Ann Arbor, MI: Health Administration Press.
* Lever J, Kanouse DE, Rogers WH, Carson S, Hertz R. (1992). Behavior patterns and sexual identity of bisexual males. Journal of Sex Research, 29, 141-167.
* Bozzette SA, Kanouse DE, Berry SH, Duan N. (1995). Health status and function with zidovudine or zalcitabine as initial therapy for AIDS: A randomized controlled trial. Journal of the American Medical Association, 273, 295-301.
* Kanouse DE , Kallich J, Kahan JP. (1995). Dissemination of effectiveness and outcomes research: A review. Health Policy,34, 167-192.
* Schuster MA, Bell RM., Kanouse DE. (1996). The sexual practices of adolescent virgins: Genital sexual activities of high school students who have never had vaginal intercourse. American Journal of Public Health, 86, 1570-1577.
* Schuster MA, Kanouse DE, Morton SC, Bozzette SA, Miu A, Scott GB, Shapiro MF. (2000). HIV-infected parents and their children in the United States. American Journal of Public Health, 90, 1074-1081.
* Gifford AL, Collins R, Timberlake D, Schuster MA, Shapiro MF, Bozzette SA, Kanouse DE. (2000). Propensity of HIV patients to seek urgent and emergent care. Journal of General Internal Medicine, 15, 833-840.
* Chen JL, Phillips KA, Kanouse DE, Collins RL, Miu A. (2001). Fertility desires and intentions of HIV-positive men and women. Family Planning Perspectives, 33, 144-152 & 165.
* Ciccarone DH, Kanouse DE, Collins RL, Miu A, Chen JL, Morton SC., Stall, R. (2003). Sex without disclosure of positive HIV serostatus in a US probability sample of persons receiving medical care for HIV infection. American Journal of Public Health, 93(6):949-954.
* Collins RL, Elliott M, Berry SH, Kanouse DE, Kunkel D, Hunter S, Miu A. (2004). Watching sex on TV predicts adolescent initiation of sexual behavior. Pediatrics,114(3):e280-e289.
