Faculty/Staff

Sokol Tushe

Sokol Tushe

Assistant Professor
stushe@usf.edu 
Campus: Tampa
Room: CIS 2085

Sokol Tushe is an assistant professor of information systems at the University of South Florida Muma College of Business. His research focuses on healthcare operations. His research agenda is focused on identifying operational practices or developing methodological tools that healthcare professionals can use in practice. Close collaborations with physicians, nurses, and public health experts ensure that my work is both technically sound and grounded in the needs of end users.

He holds a PhD in Information Systems and Operations from the Giozueta Business School, Emory University. His industry experience covers consulting, financial analysis, and business operations across the U.S. and Europe, including roles at Boston Consulting Group, Allianz Worldwide Partners, General Electric, and American Express.

Teaching

  • QMB2100 - Bus Economic Statistics I
  • QMB3253 - Business Honors Advanced Statistics
  • CAI3801 - AI and Analytics
  • PHA6261 - Healthcare Innovation 3

Research

  • Tushe, S., Kc, D. S., Ding, H., & Yeung, H. (2025). Multichannel healthcare: Impact of asynchronous telemedicine adoption on patient flow. Manufacturing & Service Operations Management, 27(1), 59-74.
  • Ding, H., Tushe, S., Kc, D. S., & Lee, D. K. (2024). Frontiers in operations: valuing nursing productivity in emergency departments. Manufacturing & Service Operations Management, 26(4), 1323-1337.
  • Li, Y., Chu, L., Tushe, S., Supapannachart, K., Adler, C., Marconi, V., ... & Yeung, H. (2024). 53226 Validation of keratinocyte carcinoma diagnosis and treatment codes among veterans with HIV. Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology, 91(3), AB357.
  • Supapannachart, K. J., Kwon, C. W., Tushe, S., Guest, J. L., Chen, S. C., & Yeung, H. (2022). Validation of actinic keratosis diagnosis and treatment codes among veterans living with HIV. Pharmacoepidemiology and drug safety, 31(9), 998-1002.
  • Kc, D., & Tushe, S. (2021). The effects of multisiting on productivity and quality. Manufacturing & service operations management, 23(4), 803-818.