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Samia and dissertation advisor, Dr. Mimi Le

 

Congratulations to Samia Ortiz-Hernandez, who successfully defended her dissertation, "Voices of Low-Income Latinos During the Transition to Parenthood". Her committee included Mimi Le (Chair), Christina Gee, Sandraluz Lara-Cinosomo (U of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign), Deborah Perry (Georgetown University), and Cindy Rohrbeck. Samia will also start a 2-year postdoctoral fellowship in neuropsychology at the VA in DC in September. Congrats, Samia!!

The Gee lab has a reunion at Christina Gee's house! Chris Mc Nerney, Michael Reiter, Jessica Jankowski Nysenbaum, Lyzaida Rivera-Bauer, Sunny Hwang, Alyssa Poblete, Rachel Mack, and Barunie Kim were there with family and friends.

Congratulations to Dr. Lisa Bowleg who has been awarded a five-year R01 from the National Institute on Drug Abuse!  The title of the grant is “Reducing Black Men's Drug Use and Co-Occurring Negative Mental and Physical Health Outcomes: Intersectionality, Social-Structural Stressors, and Protective Factors’’.  Dr. Michelle Stock and Dr. Ana Mario del Rio are Co-Investigators. Great news!

"Reducing Black Men's Drug Use and Co-Occurring Negative Mental and Physical Health Outcomes: Intersectionality, Social-Structural Stressors, and Protective Factors".

This project seeks to study drug use among Black men, and other co-occurring negative health outcomes associated with social-structural stressors. Drug use is a contributing factor in six of the top ten leading causes of death among Black men ages 18 to 54. Social-structural stressors, including discrimination based on race or race and sexual identity, and drug use to cope with stress, are well known gateways to drug use among Black adults.  The researchers seek to address critical research gaps that exist on this topic by conducting a longitudinal cross-lagged explanatory- sequential (QUANT→qual) mixed methods study to test, via structural equation modeling, a conceptual model of social-structural stressors, protective factors, and drug use (alcohol, marijuana, nicotine, illicit drug use) and co-occurring negative mental (e.g., psychological distress) and physical (e.g., blood pressure) health outcomes among Black men at the intersection of sexual identity and socioeconomic position. The goal of the project is to develop multi-level (individual and social-structural) interventions to reduce drug use and encourage mental and physical health among Black men as they encounter various risks. To read the more about the study: https://projectreporter.nih.gov//project_info_description.cfm?aid=9496881&icde=0