Thomas Miller is a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute (AEI), where he studies health care policy, including regulatory barriers to choice and competition, market-based alternatives to the Affordable Care Act, health care litigation, and the political economy of health care reform.

Before joining von Briesen, Tom founded and managed an intellectual property firm in Chicago for fifteen years, and has practiced patent law for twenty-five years in total. Prior to his career as a patent attorney, Tom was an engineer with Rockwell Automation working within its motor, drive and programmable logic controller division.


Thomas Mller


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My husband Bruce who loved me as I loved him predeceased me in 2020. We shared 55 wonderful years together and were able to travel over a great part of our world. My dear son Ryan Thomas Miller who has given me my worst headaches, has also been a great help to me. I love him to death. He has also given me two beautiful granddaughters, Tessa and Daphne Miller, both of whom I am crazy about. I also cherish my beautiful artist niece, Stephanie St Thomas (Tom Scharlow) and my brother Craig Michael Thomas who has helped me so much. I truly thank him.

Thomas Miller has experience acting on a wide range of financings and restructurings. He has broad experience in the leveraged finance space acting on complex cross-border acquisition financings and refinancings in a variety of industries, with a particular focus on infrastructure and leisure.

Dr. Tom Miller is an Associate Professor of Finance in the Department of Economics and Finance at West Chester University and earned his Ph.D. degree from the Smeal College of Business at the Pennsylvania State University. He is currently serving on Faculty Senate and in the past served as faculty advisor to the Economics and Finance Society. His teaching interests are in corporate finance, derivatives, and Microsoft Excel. Dr. Miller's areas of research include payout policy, social media information content, and the market for corporate control. He has published articles in finance and accounting in various journals such as the International Research Journal of Applied Finance, the Journal of Forensic Accounting, and the Journal of Trading.

Dr. Thomas Miller hails from Montana where he grew up and earned a BS degree in Chemistry and Biology at the College of Great Falls (Now University of Providence) before moving to Michigan where he completed his DO from Michigan State University College of Osteopathic Medicine. He completed his internship at Mt. Clemens General Hospital in Mt. Clemens, MI prior to beginning his 20-year Air Force career. While in the Air Force he completed a residency in Family Practice and was Chief Resident at Creighton University. He remains Board Certified in Family Medicine.

Dr. Miller was a staff physician on the Creighton University Family Practice Residency for one year until he was moved by the Air Force. He also earned a Master of Public Health with an emphasis in occupational medicine from The Johns Hopkins University. His main occupations in the Air Force were family medicine and flight medicine. After his retirement from the Air Force, he worked for U.S. Healthworks in Spokane, WA doing urgent care and occupational medicine for 10 years until he moved to Kennewick, WA. While in the Tri-cities Dr. Miller worked for HPMC Occupational Medical Services, a contractor for the Department of Energy at Hanford until accepting an assistant professor position at Heritage University. While at Heritage University, he worked with the PA and Master of Arts in Medical Science programs and worked one day each week at Pacific Northwest University. Dr. Miller joined the staff at PNWU exclusively in May 2020 where he helped manage the clinical skills lab for first and second-year students until mid-October 2022.

Thomas Miller MD is board certified in internal medicine. His clinical expertise in adult medicine includes evaluation and treatment of hypertension, lipid (cholesterol) abnormalities, adult onset diabetes, and heart and vascular disease. 


Dr. Miller received his MD from George Washington University in 1988 and completed a residency in internal medicine at the University of Utah in 1991. He has been a member of the Division of General Medicine since 1992.

Dr. Miller is an excellent primary care physician. He is caring, knowledgeable and provides me with the information I need, to make sound healthcare decisions. I trust his judgement and he always responds to my questions in a very timely manner. I am lucky to have him as my primary care physician.

Have had Dr Miller for my primary care physician a very long time and can easily say he has always made me feel that he really cares about his patients. He has improved my health every step of the way.

Dr. Thomas Miller has been my primary doctor for over 25 years and the care he has given me and my wife is unprecidented. I believe his care and referrals have been a lot of my life saving experiences.

Dr. Miller is very kind, caring, friendly and great doctor. I have been his patient for a long time. I greatly admire his professional judgement and have complete trust in his care. He went over the physical exam and the test results with me in detail. Even after the visit, he had been thinking about my test results and sent a message on addressing a couple things he was concerned about. I am so fortunate to have him as my doctor.

I wish everyone could have a primary provider that shows the same level of thoughtful concern and listening as does Dr. Miller. Every question is listened to and attended to, and replies are after careful consideration and--when indicated--research in the medical history or medical literature.

Green, M. D., and T. E. Miller. 2019. Germination traits explain deterministic processes in the assembly of early successional coastal dune vegetation. Estuaries and Coasts 42:1097-1103. doi: -019-00550

In the past he worked as a senior research and development staff member of the Nuclear Data and Criticality Safety group within the Reactor and Nuclear Systems Division at Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL). He received a Ph.D. in Nuclear Engineering from the University of Tennessee in 2004. His Ph.D. dissertation involved creating an event generator to model the particle production of nucleus-nucleus collisions for charged particles as heavy as lead with energies up to 22.5 GeV and incorporating this into the Monte Carlo code HETC to create HETC-HEDS. Since finishing his Ph.D., Dr. Miller has work at the Bettis Atomic Power Laboratory in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania and ORNL. His work has primarily involved the application of fixed-source radiation transport codes. Examples include designing radiation shielding for the US Naval Reactors Program, investigating the use of bremsstrahlung sources created by an electron linac to actively interrogate maritime cargo for hidden special nuclear material, the design and evaluation of a shielding benchmark experiment with a pulsed critical fissile solution source, evaluating the variation of neutron and photon terrestrial background due to extraterrestrial sources, and developing a tool to use inverse algorithms to identify elemental composition of particulate samples analyzed by a scanning electron microscope.

Thomas Miller is a resident fellow at the American Enterprise Institute (AEI), where he studies health policy, with particular emphasis on regulatory barriers to choice and competition, health care litigation, and the political economy of health care reform. He has been closely involved in key aspects of health policy development in the legislative, executive, and judicial branches of government for more than 25 years.

Miller was a member of the National Advisory Council for the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality from 2007 to 2009 and was a senior health policy adviser for the John McCain presidential campaign in 2008. Before joining AEI in 2006, Miller served for three years as senior health economist for the Joint Economic Committee of the U.S. Congress. He has also been director of health policy studies at the Cato Institute and director of economic policy studies at the Competitive Enterprise Institute. He is a member of the State Bar of Georgia

Before going to Washington, Miller was a trial attorney in Atlanta, Ga., a radio news director in Anderson, S.C., and a sportscaster in Charlotte, N.C. (including several seasons as play-by-play voice of the Davidson College Wildcats basketball team).

By July 31, 1824, Thomas Miller was a landholder in Prince Edward County, Virginia, where his property was bounded by land owned by other members of his family, all of whom had received their portions from property formerly owned by his father who had died in 1813. By 1826 Thomas and his brother Richard were lending money and providing security for people in debt to the store owned by their uncle, Anderson Perkins Miller.

On March 11, 1832, he married sixteen-year-old Sidney Gaston, sister of John E. Gaston. They had one child who died in infancy. On August 22, 1833, they separated, and Sidney married John Benjamin Kellogg. Miller, Gaston, and Kellogg were all among the Gonzales Rangers who went in relief to the Alamo.

Joseph Lalor was a nephew who had lived with him in Gonzales but had gotten into some difficulty and returned to Virginia. Edward B. Miller and Richard F. Miller were still in Prince Edward County, Virginia, and did not go to Texas to receive their inheritance. George Dabney Miller, however, did petition the probate court on November 5, 1839: 17dc91bb1f

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