Aaron Blaakman is a Health Economics and Financing Research Consultant
with extensive expertise in Africa and other international venues.
Aaron P. Beaston-Blaakman’s most recent domestic project, “A Conceptual
and Empirical Analysis of Costing Methodologies in Substance Abuse
Treatment,” was funded by the NIH National Institute on Drug Abuse for
three years, 2004 through 2007.
Research Positions and Projects
Aaron Blaakman has held several research positions over the last
decade. From 2005 to 2008, he held the position of Scientist I in
Economics at Family Health International, Durham, N.C. While there,
Aaron P. Beaston-Blaakman acted as principal investigator on the NIH
project. He also conducted cost analysis of peer education, family
planning, screening and other health and human services initiatives in
Guinea, Kenya, Mali, South Africa, Senegal, Uganda and Zambia.
From 1998 to 2005, Aaron Blaakman was a research associate conducting
substance abuse and international health cost and cost-effectiveness
analysis at Brandeis University, Schneider Institute for Health Policy
and Heller School for Social Policy and Management in Massachusetts.
While there, Aaron P. Beaston-Blaakman worked on the NIH project as
well as many other cost-analysis projects concerning substance abuse
and other health issues. From 2000 to 20003 he was also the principal
investigator of a seed grant for the Heller School for Advanced Studies
in Social Welfare; the proposal was a strategic collaboration between
the Heller School, Acre Family Day Care and the community of Lowell,
Mass.
Prior to that, Aaron P. Beaston-Blaakman was a program evaluation
director at Charles River Health Management in Boston.
Aaron Blaakman has additionally conducted cost-analysis consulting
projects for Texas Christian University; the Family First Project; the
University of North Carolina School of Medicine; the University of
Massachusetts Medical Center; Columbia University’s National Center on
Addiction and Substance Abuse; Mt. Sinai Medical Center; and many
others.
Academic Staff Experience
From 1999 to 2000, Aaron P. Beaston-Blaakman was an adjunct professor
of health policy at Tufts University Experimental College in Medford,
Mass. In 1999, he also took his expertise to Dakar, Senegal, where he
served as an adjunct lecturer in Cost-Effectiveness Analysis at the
Centre D’Etudes Supérieurs en Gestion. Aaron P. Beaston-Blaakman
was also an instructor in the Sustainable International Development
Program at Brandeis University from 1998 to 1999. In 1998, he was an
adjunct lecturer at Boston’s Emmanuel College within the Healthcare
Administration Program.
Social Work and Clinical Experience
Aaron P. Beaston-Blaakman has hands-on clinical experience as well.
From 1993 to 1994, he held several positions at the Hillside Children’s
Center in Rochester, N.Y., including program assistant, juvenile
justice social worker, sociotherapist and recreation therapist.
Education
Aaron P. Beaston-Blaakman earned his PhD in Social Policy with
concentration in Health Economics and Finance from the Heller School
for Social Policy and Management at Brandeis University. His
dissertation focused on advancing economic analysis of substance abuse
treatment. Aaron P. Beaston-Blaakman also holds a master’s degree in
Social Policy from Brandeis. At Syracuse University, N.Y., Aaron P.
Beaston-Blaakman earned an MPA from the Maxwell School of Citizenship
and Public Affairs and an MSW from the School of Social Work. Aaron P.
Beaston-Blaakman earned his bachelor’s degree in Economics and French
at Fordham University, New York.
Publications and Honors
Aaron P. Beaston-Blaakman authored a review on the 2006 book, "Better
but not well: mental health policy in the United States since
1950." The review was published in the peer-reviewed Journal of
Mental Health Policy Economics, Sept. 10, 2007.
Aaron P. Beaston-Blaakman is a joint author of many articles, including:
• “Effectiveness of training supervisors to improve
reproductive health quality of care: a cluster-randomized trial in
Kenya,” Health Policy Plan, 2008.
• “Cost-effectiveness of clinical interventions for
AIDS wasting,” AIDS Care, 2007.
• “Organizational and Client Determinants of Cost in
Outpatient Substance Abuse Treatment,” Journal of Mental Health Policy
Economics, 2007
• “Racial and ethnic differences in health and health
care: Lessons from an inner-city patient population actively
using heroin and cocaine,” Journal of Ethnicity in Substance Abuse,
2006.
• “Unmet need for substance abuse treatment of adults
in Massachusetts,” Administration and Policy in Mental Health
32(4):403-426, 2005.
Aaron P. Beaston-Blaakman was named a University Fellow at Syracuse
University, Academic Year 1995-1996. He also received the Masters
Prize, Convocation 1996, at Syracuse University’s School of Social
Work. And in 1995, Aaron P. Beaston-Blaakman was named the Mark and
Pearle Clements Intern Scholar, Seoul, Korea.
Aaron P. Beaston-Blaakman is fluent in French and lives in Cary, N.C.
Aaron P. Beaston-Blaakman is skilled in relevant software programs
including Microsoft Office, SPSS, SAS and Wesvar.
Aaron Beaston-Blaakman at aaronbeaston-blaakman.com
Aaron Beaston-Blaakman at aaronbeaston-blaakman.org
Aaron Beaston-Blaakman at claimid.com
Aaron Beaston-Blaakman at linkedin.com
Aaron Beaston-Blaakman at ziggs.com
Aaron Beaston-Blaakman at vox.com
Aaron Beaston-Blaakman at ikarma.com
Aaron Beaston-Blaakman at squidoo.com