UCSF Helen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center

  Dorie Apollonio, MPP, PhD

Assistant Adjunct Professor, Department of Clinical Pharmacy, UCSF

Contact

.(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)
(415) 502-1942 (voice)
(415) 502-0792 (fax) (fax)

Box 0613, UCSF; San Francisco, CA 94143-0613

Education

Macalester College, St. Paul, MN, BA, 1992, Political Science, History
Harvard Kennedy School, Cambridge, MA, MPP, 1994, Health Policy
University of California, Berkeley, CA, PhD, 2003, Political Science
University of California, San Francisco, CA, Postdoctoral, 2003-2006, Health Policy

Professional Experience

  • 1993
    Research Analyst and Interviewer, Seattle-King County Department of Public Health, Seattle-Area Needle Exchange and AIDS Prevention Unit
  • 1993-1994
    Graduate Student Instructor, Harvard Kennedy School
  • 1994-2002
    Graduate Student Researcher, UC Berkeley
  • 1998-2000
    Statistical Consultant, Pacific Gas & Electric Dynamic Load Profiling Group
  • 2002-2003
    Survey Research Associate, Public Policy Institute of California
  • 2003-2005
    Postdoctoral Fellow, UCSF School of Medicine
  • 2005-2006
    Postdoctoral Fellow, UCSF Schools of Pharmacy and Nursing
  • 2006-present
    Assistant Professor, UCSF School of Pharmacy

Honors & Awards

  • 1995
    Henry Robert Braden Fellowship, UC Berkeley
  • 2000-2001
    Graduate Dissertation Fellowship, UC Berkeley
  • 2003-2005
    American Legacy Foundation Fellowship, UCSF School of Medicine
  • 2005
    Certificate in Health Services Research, UCSF School of Medicine
  • 2008
    Academic Senate Travel Grant, UCSF
  • 2008
    Dean's Recognition for Excellence in Teaching Award, UCSF School of Pharmacy
  • 2009
    Regulation and Governance Prize for the best article published in the journal in 2007 or 2008

Selected Publications

  • Apollonio DE, La Raja RJ. Who Gave Soft Money? The Effect of Interest Group Resources on Political Contributions. The Journal of Politics 2004; 66(4): 1159-1179.
  • Apollonio DE, Carne MA. Interest Group Advocacy and the Power of 'Magic Words'. Election Law Journal 2005; 4(3): 178-190.
  • Apollonio DE. Predictors of Interest Group Lobbying Decisions. The Forum: A Journal of Applied Research in Contemporary Politics 2005; 3(3): 1-20.
  • Apollonio DE, Malone RE. Marketing to the marginalized: tobacco industry targeting of the homeless and mentally ill. Tobacco Control 2005; 14(6): 409-415.
  • Apollonio DE, La Raja RJ. Term Limits, Campaign Contributions, and the Distribution of Power in State Legislatures. Legislative Studies Quarterly 2006; 31(2): 259-281.
  • Apollonio DE, Bero LA. Creating Industry Front Groups: The Tobacco Industry and 'Get Government Off Our Back'. American Journal of Public Health 2007; 97(3): 419-427.
  • Apollonio DE, Lopipero P, Bero LA. Participation and argument in legislative debate on smoking restrictions. Health Research and Policy Systems 2007; 5(12): 1-36.
  • Lopipero P, Apollonio DE, Bero LA. Interest Groups, Lobbying, and Deception: The Passage of the Airline Smoking Acts. Political Science Quarterly 2007; 122(4): 635-656.
  • Lochner T, Apollonio DE, Tatum R. Wheat from Chaff: Third-Party Monitoring and FEC Enforcement Actions. Regulation and Governance 2008; 2(2): 216-233.
  • Apollonio DE, Cain BE, Drutman L. Access and Lobbying: Looking Beyond the Corruption Paradigm. Hastings Constitutional Law Quarterly 2008; 36(1): 13-50.
  • Apollonio DE, Malone RE. Turning negative into positive: Public health mass media campaigns and negative advertising. Health Education Research; 24(3): 483-495.

Updated: September 21, 2010