Patrick Krueger, Health and Behavioral Sciences faculty and director of the graduate program, can often be found in one of Denver’s ice cream shops. Having worked in a few states he finds Denver to be a great place to live. He says, “I enjoy having access to the mountains (biking, snowshoeing, hiking) and also the city (museums, restaurants). Denver is becoming a more expensive place to live, but the amenities are phenomenal.”
Patrick’s research focuses on two broad areas—education disparities in mortality and the social determinants of health behaviors.You can view Patrick's TED talk here. His most recent publication with undergraduate alumna Ilham A. Dehry in Milbank Quarterly examines the economic value of the longer, healthier lives associated with additional education. He enjoys working in an interdisciplinary department because it supports his efforts to do science that, in his case, spans sociology, demography, social epidemiology, and health policy.
Patrick mentors a number of students. He says, “working with students is one of my favorite parts of my job. I work with both undergraduates and graduate students on research, and I love challenging them to grow new intellectual muscles. Becoming a researcher takes real intellectual and emotional vulnerability—there's often a lot of failure in the process. It takes a lot of courage for students to keep writing, working on statistics, and thinking. I enjoy helping them through that process to become strong, creative researchers.”
For anyone applying to doctoral programs, he recommends that applicants reach out to faculty in that program before applying. He notes that program fit is important because “a PhD program teaches you sets of frameworks for how to see the world, and the theoretical and methodological skills to work within that framework. Ideally, you'll know that the way you want to think is a match for the program where you’ll study.”