Meghan Meredith (IE Ph.D. 2025, Operations Research), has been named the first-place winner of the Pritsker Doctoral Dissertation Award by the Institute of Industrial and Systems Engineers (IISE) for her dissertation, “Operations Research for Improved and Equitable Maternal Health.” The recognition highlights the impact of her work in applying operations research to one of the most pressing healthcare challenges in the United States: poor maternal health outcomes.
“My dissertation focused on maternal health in the U.S., particularly in Georgia,” Meredith said. “Women are experiencing maternal morbidity and mortality at much higher rates than in other high-income countries. There are also significant racial, ethnic, and rural-urban disparities. All of this points to systemic issues in how maternal healthcare is provided.”
Meredith’s research combined data analysis, modeling, and policy-focused tools to understand and improve access to obstetric care. A major focus was how access is measured and how to use existing resources more effectively.
“One widely used metric, ‘maternity care deserts,’ looks at access by county,” she explained. “But in Georgia, someone might be labeled as lacking care even if a hospital is just a mile across the county line. We realized that this metric was measuring the wrong thing in Georgia. Our work focuses on providing actionable insights to policymakers so they can ensure women have high-quality care nearby.”
Her research was motivated by the urgent need to address poor maternal outcomes in Georgia, which ranks among the worst states in the U.S. for both maternal mortality and racial disparities. “We see that half of women who die due to pregnancy-related causes die after delivery,” Meredith said. “Pregnancy is a critical opportunity to engage women in their healthcare, and it’s essential to focus on both maternal and fetal health.”
Meredith’s contributions aim to bridge the gap between complex operations research models and real-world healthcare decision making. “We want to take the guesswork out of policy decisions,” she said. “If a hospital closes or receives funding, our models can estimate the impact on care access and outcomes.”
Receiving the IISE award underscores the impact of Meredith’s research. “We were so focused on improving maternal health in Georgia,” she said. “This recognition shows that meaningful healthcare research can also advance the field of operations research and industrial engineering.”
Meredith credits much of her success to her advisor, Professor Lauren Steimle, who nominated her for the award and provided guidance throughout her PhD program, which she began during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic. “Her support was critical, especially during the first year and a half of online learning and isolation,” Meredith said. She also highlighted the importance of her women-led team of collaborators, including physicians and epidemiologists, working on this women-centered research.
Currently a postdoctoral researcher at NYU Langone Health, Meredith is applying her expertise to organ transplant policy, a field where operations research directly informs life-saving decisions. “Access, efficiency, and equity are still central themes,” she said. “The goal is to use powerful tools to improve care outcomes wherever they’re needed most.”
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