
Thomas N. Robinson, MD, MPH
Irving Schulman, MD Endowed Professor in Child Health; Professor of Pediatrics and of Medicine and Stanford Health Policy Associate
Division of General Pediatrics and
Stanford Prevention Research Center
Stanford University School of Medicine
Hoover Pavilion, N229
211 Quarry Road, Mail Code 5705
Stanford, California 94305-5705
Research Interests
development and evaluation of health promotion and disease prevention interventions for children and adolescents; advanced models of human behavior; the effects of television viewing on children's health and behavior
Thomas N. Robinson, MD, MPH is the Irving Schulman, MD Endowed Professor in Child Health, Professor of Pediatrics and of Medicine, in the Division of General Pediatrics and the Stanford Prevention Research Center at Stanford University School of Medicine, and Director of the Center for Healthy Weight at Stanford University and Lucile Packard Children's Hospital at Stanford. Dr. Robinson focuses on "solution-oriented" research, developing and evaluating health promotion and disease prevention interventions for children, adolescents and their families to directly inform medical and public health practice and policy.
His research is largely experimental in design, conducting school-, family- and community-based randomized controlled trials to test the efficacy and/or effectiveness of theory-driven behavioral, social and environmental interventions to prevent and reduce obesity, improve nutrition, increase physical activity and decrease inactivity, reduce smoking, reduce children's television and media use, and demonstrate causal relationships between hypothesized risk factors and health outcomes. Robinson's research is grounded in social cognitive models of human behavior, uses rigorous methods, and is performed in generalizable settings with diverse populations, making the results of his research more relevant for clinical and public health practice and policy.
His research is published widely in the peer-reviewed scientific literature. Robinson received both his B.S. and M.D. from Stanford University and his M.P.H. in Maternal and Child Health from the University of California, Berkeley. He completed his internship and residency in Pediatrics at Children's Hospital, Boston and Harvard Medical School, and then returned to Stanford for post-doctoral training as a Robert Wood Johnson Clinical Scholar. Robinson joined the faculty at Stanford in 1993, was appointed Assistant Professor in 1996, and promoted to Associate Professor with tenure in 2003. He was a Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Generalist Physician Faculty Scholar, was a member of the Institute of Medicine's Committees on Prevention of Obesity in Children and Adolescents and Progress in Preventing Childhood Obesity, and is Principal Investigator on numerous prevention studies funded by the National Institutes of Health. Dr. Robinson also is Board Certified in Pediatrics, a fellow of the American Academy of Pediatrics, and practices General Pediatrics at Lucile Packard Children's Hospital at Stanford.
Stanford Departments
Medicine; Pediatrics
Publications
The 5 most recent are displayed. More publications »
The Utility of Childhood and Adolescent Obesity Assessment in Relation to Adult Health
Jeremy Goldhaber-Fiebert, Rachel Rubinfeld, Jay Bhattacharya, Thomas N. Robinson, Paul H. Wise
Medical Decision Making (2012)
Definition of Metabolic Syndrome in Preadolescent Girls
CH Chi, Y Wang, DM Wilson, Thomas N. Robinson
Journal of Pediatrics vol. 148, 6 (2006)
Does Children's Screen Time Predict Requests for Advertised Products? Cross-Sectional and Prospective Analyses
LJ Chamberlain, Y Wang, Thomas N. Robinson
Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine vol. 160, 4 (2006)
Are Certain Multicenter Randomized Clinical Trial Structures Misleading Clinical and Policy Decisions?
HC Kraemer, Thomas N. Robinson
Contemporary Clinical Trials vol. 26, 5 (2005)
Preventing Childhood Obesity: A Solution-Oriented Research Paradigm
Thomas N. Robinson, JR Sirard
American Journal of Preventive Medicine vol. 28, 2 Suppl 2 (2005)



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