Regina L. Loewenstein (February 10, 1916 – May 16, 1999)[1] was an American public health statistician who worked as a lecturer in the Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health.[2]

Life

Loewenstein was born on February 10, 1916.[3] She graduated from Barnard College in 1936,[4] and earned a master's degree in mathematics from Columbia University in 1937, with the master's thesis The elliptic functions of Legendre and Jacobi.[5]

In 1948, she was chief of the operations department of the Study of Child Health Services of the American Academy of Pediatrics.[6] Beginning in the late 1940s, she worked with Gilbert Wheeler Beebe as a statistics researcher in the Medical Follow-up Agency of the National Research Council (NRC),[7] and by 1952 she was listed as chief of the statistics section of the Committee on Veterans Medical Problems of the NRC,[8] before later returning to Columbia as a faculty member.[2]

In 1971, she helped found the Caucus for Women in Statistics of the American Statistical Association, serving as one of its four original executive committee members.[9] She was also active for many years in the American Public Health Association.[8][10]

Recognition

Loewenstein was named a Fellow of the American Statistical Association in 1976.[11] Columbia University offers a student prize, the Regina Loewenstein Prize for Academic Excellence in Health Policy and Management, named in her honor.

References

  1. "Loewenstein, Regina", Paid death notices, The New York Times, 18 May 1999
  2. 1 2 "In memorial: The university honors the lives of those who've passed away", Columbia University Record, p. 7, 14 April 2000
  3. "Regina Loewenstein", Social Security Death Index, retrieved 2021-08-21 via fold3
  4. "Alumnae donors: Class of 1936", Barnard Alumnae Magazine, p. 29, Fall 1966
  5. WorldCat catalog entry for The elliptic functions of Legendre and Jacobi, accessed 2021-08-21
  6. "Applications for membership: Vital statistics section", Association News, American Journal of Public Health and the Nation's Health, American Public Health Association, 38 (4): 588, April 1948, doi:10.2105/ajph.38.4.587
  7. Berkowitz, E. D.; Santangelo, M. J. (1999), "2: The Early Committee Years", The Medical Follow-up Agency: The First Fifty Years 1946–1996, Washington (DC): National Academies Press
  8. 1 2 "Applications for fellowship: Statistics section", Association News, American Journal of Public Health and the Nation's Health, American Public Health Association, 42 (9): 1189, September 1952, doi:10.2105/ajph.42.9.1188
  9. Golbeck, Amanda (April 2020), "Supporting an inclusive community: A Caucus for Women in Statistics", Significance, Wiley, 17 (2): 42–44, doi:10.1111/1740-9713.01379, S2CID 216497864
  10. "APHA's new 40-year members, 1988", Association News, American Journal of Public Health, American Public Health Association, 78 (12): 1602, December 1988, doi:10.2105/ajph.78.12.1600
  11. ASA Fellows List, American Statistical Association, retrieved 2016-07-22
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