Liz Richardson directs Pew’s health care products project, which focuses on strengthening and improving medical product regulation to safeguard patients and consumers.
Richardson joined Pew from the Duke-Robert J. Margolis Center for Health Policy, where she oversaw a variety of projects related to FDA regulation, and value-based payment models. Prior to her role with Duke, she worked as an associate at both the Brookings Institution and the Urban Institute, where she focused on a range of health policy topics, including biomedical innovation, regulatory policy, care delivery, and payment reform.
Richardson holds a bachelor’s degree in anthropology and French from Wake Forest University and a master’s in global health and public policy from the University of Edinburgh.