John Gale, M.S.
Professional Affiliations
John is a Research Associate at the Maine Rural Health Research
Center (MRHRC) at the Muskie School of Public Service Maine at the
University of Southern Maine (USM). He received his M.S. in Health
Policy and Management from the Muskie School of Public Service and his
B.S. in Business Administration from USM’s School of Business and
Economics. He has been with the MRHRC since 1999 where his research
interests have included mental health and substance abuse services, the
integration of mental health and primary care services, rural safety net
programs, primary care delivery systems, and small rural hospitals.
Prior to joining MHRHC, John had nineteen years experience as a senior
manager in non-profit and proprietary health care organizations
including a large mental health and substance abuse group practice and a
multi-disciplinary academic primary care practice. In addition to
serving on the NARMH board, he serves on the Policy Board for the
National Rural Health Association, the Board of the New England Rural
Health Roundtable, the Primary Care Advisory Committee for the Missouri
Foundation for Health, and the steering committee for the National Rural
Health Clinic Technical Assistance Project. He was a 2002 Fellow in the
Secretary’s Primary Care Policy Fellowship sponsored by the U.S.
Department of Health and Human Services.
NARMH Positions and Projects
John has been a NARHM Board Member since 2002 and serves as a member
of the Rural Mental Health Policy Committee. Past activities have
included serving as the Chair of the Membership Committee. He has worked
with other board members on the “Rural and Frontier Mental and
Behavioral Health Care: Barriers, Effective Policy Strategies, Best
Practices” report.
Rural Mental Health Involvement and Contributions
John has worked extensively in the field of mental health and
substance abuse treatment from both the management and research
perspectives. He has published extensively on his research interests and
has presented the findings from his research at numerous state and
national meetings. He recently chaired the committee to update the
National Rural Health Association’s Rural Mental Health policy paper. He
is currently working with David Lambert to develop a rural mental health
assessment process for the 23 states in the Northeast and Southeast
Regions of the National Organizations of State Offices of Rural Health.
He also serves as the principal investigator for a study of the Maine
barriers to the integration of mental health and primary care services
funded by the Maine Health Access Foundation.