Perry Paige Bldg Room #119
Mondays • 2:00 p.m - 3:OO p.m
Wednesdays • 2:00 p.m - 3:OO p.m
Advanced Studying • Mon. Wed. Fri — 9:15am-10:30am
Advanced Studying • Mon. Wed. Fri — 1:15pm-2:30pm
Appreciation of Studying • Tu. Th.— 9:15am-10:30am
Colloquium in Studying • Tu. Th — 1:15pm-2:30pm
Dr. Askal Ayalew Ali received her Ph.D in Pharmacoeconomics from Florida Agriculture
and Mechanical University, College of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences (COPPS).
Immediately following graduation, she was offered and accepted an assistant professorship.
Her decision was heavily influenced by her strong commitment to the Pharm D and graduate
education programs within COPPS. She has published several peer reviewed papers and
has been awarded the FAMU COPPS 2017 teacher of the Year Award. Currently, Dr. Ali
is mentoring 4 students and serving as dissertation committee member in ESAP and Institute
of Public Health students. In 2019 she received a Mini Medical Marijuana Research
and Educational grant from FAMU. The aim of this min grant is to measure the knowledge
and perceptions of pediatric cancer patient care giver’s regarding medical marijuana.
In addition, she is a co-investigator on a 2019 awarded U54-RCMI NIH grant project
3 entitled: Test Up Now Education Program (TUNE-UP). Her role in the TUNE-UP grant
is to examine the cost-effectiveness of a community health advisors educational intervention
to improve colorectal cancer screening rate among African Americans.
- Pharmacoeconomics/Health Economics
- Decision Modeling, patient satisfaction and self-rated health status
- Comparative Effectiveness research
- Patient-centered outcomes research
- Health Disparities
- Data Collection and Evidence synthesis (systemic reviews and meta-analyses)
- Pharmacoeconomics and Health Outcomes Research, Ph.D. • 2016
Florida A&M University
- Eastern Illinois University • 2010
M.S. in Economics
- Bahir Dar University (Ethiopia) • 2005
B.S. in Economics
- Diaby, V., Ali, A. A., & Montero, A. J. (2019). Value assessment frameworks in the United States: a call
for patient engagement.
- Ali, A. A., Tawk, R., Xiao, H., Campbell, E., Semykina, A., Montero, A. J., ... & Diaby, V. (2019).
Comparative effectiveness of radiotherapy for early‐stage hormone receptor‐positive
breast cancer in elderly women using real‐world data. Cancer medicine, 8(1), 117-127.
- Ali, A. A., Xiao, H., Tawk, R., Campbell, E., Semykina, A., Montero, A. J., & Diaby, V. (2017).
Comparison of health utility weights among elderly patients receiving breast-conserving
surgery plus hormonal therapy with or without radiotherapy. Current medical research and opinion, 33(2), 391-400.
- Diaby, V., Ali, A. A., Williams, K. J., Ezendu, K., Soto-Perez-de-Celis, E., Chavarri-Guerra, Y., & de Lima
Lopes, G. (2017). Economic evaluation of sequencing strategies in HER2-positive metastatic
breast cancer in Mexico: a contrast between public and private payer perspectives. Breast cancer research and treatment, 166(3), 951-963.
- Tan, F., Xiao, H., Gummadi, S., Koniaris, L. G., Feldman, J. D., Ali, A., ... & Huang, Y. (2017). Impact of body mass index on prognosis for breast cancer
patients.
- Diaby, V., Adunlin, G., Ali, A. A., Zeichner, S. B., de Lima Lopes, G., Kohn, C. G., & Montero, A. J. (2016). Cost-effectiveness
analysis of 1st through 3rd line sequential targeted therapy in HER2-positive metastatic
breast cancer in the United States. Breast cancer research and treatment, 160(1), 187-196.
- Diaby, V., Ali, A. A., Adunlin, G., Kohn, C. G., & Montero, A. J. (2016). Parameterization of a disease
progression simulation model for sequentially treated metastatic human epidermal growth
factor receptor 2 positive breast cancer patients. Current medical research and opinion, 32(6), 991-996.
- Ali, A. A., Xiao, H., Campbell, E. S., & Diaby, V. (2015). Improving health care decision making
in the USA through comparative effectiveness research: the role of economic evaluation. Pharmaceutical Medicine, 29(5), 247-253.
- Diaby, V., Adunlin, G., Ali, A. A., & Tawk, R. (2014). Using quality-adjusted progression-free survival as an outcome
measure to assess the benefits of cancer drugs in randomized-controlled trials: case
of the BOLERO-2 trial. Breast cancer research and treatment, 146(3), 669-673.
- Diaby, V., Adunlin, G., Zeichner, S. B., Avancha, K., Lopes, G., Gluck, S., & Montero,
A. J. (2014). Cost-effectiveness analysis of everolimus plus exemestane versus exemestane
alone for treatment of hormone receptor positive metastatic breast cancer. Breast cancer research and treatment, 147(2), 433-441.