| Bankole Olatosi |
Health Services Policy and Management |
Dr. Banky Olatosi's research is focused on improving health outcomes by identifying
and examining patterns found in large sets of patient-generated data. His research
interests are in the fields of Health Analytics, HIV/AIDS, and COVID-19. His work
in these areas is instrumental in understanding how big data science can advance important
discoveries in disease surveillance, transmission, natural history, and progression
important for treatment and necessary for targeted intervention purposes in the state. |
| Christina Andrews |
Health Services Policy and Management |
Christina M. Andrews’ research focuses on public financing for substance use disorder
treatment, with a particular focus on Medicaid. She is currently leading two national
studies funded by the National Institutes of Health assessing the effects of Medicaid
managed care on access to alcohol use disorder treatment and opioid use disorder treatment.
Dr. Andrews also serves as Regional Editor for the Americas for Addiction, the leading
international journal in the field. Her research has been supported by the Agency
for Healthcare Quality and Research, the National Institute on Drug Abuse, the National
Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, other government and nonprofit organizations. |
| Brian Chen |
Health Services Policy and Management |
Dr. Chen’s research interest lies in investigating how food and drug laws, as well
as financial interests from drug prescriptions, influence the quantity and manner
in which prescription drugs are prescribed to patients. As prescription medications
continue to be a significant part of healthcare delivery, Dr. Chen focuses his research
agenda on assessing the choices and consequences associated with explicit and implicit
policies surrounding prescription medications, particularly those with high potential
for addiction. |
| Pieter Baker |
Epidemiology |
Dr. Baker’s research focuses on the risk environment for HIV, overdose, and other
drug-related harms among vulnerable populations, including people who inject drugs.
He is particularly interested in measuring and mitigating exposures to the criminal
justice system (e.g., policy enforcement, policing, incarceration) that may drive
harm. |
| Jennifer Fillo |
Health Promotion, Education, and Behavior |
Dr. Fillo's research examines social and interpersonal processes related to health
behavior, with a particular focus on the influence of close others (e.g., family,
friends, romantic partners) on the use of alcohol and other substances. Her research
program aims to inform interventions leveraging the influence of close others to support
health behavior change. Dr. Fillo has expertise in close relationship processes, substance
use, and the design and analysis of dyadic and longitudinal studies. |
| James Croker |
Health Services Policy and Management |
Dr. Croker's research examines the relationship between minoritized identity and polysubstance
use (i.e., tobacco, cannabis, and alcohol products), particularly among adolescents
and emerging adults (AEA), and among older adults living with HIV. Dr. Croker's long-term
research interests aim at reducing health disparities (including tobacco related morbidity,
mortality, and substance abuse) for people of color, LGBT people, AEA, and older PLWH
through individual health promotion, harm reduction, and multi-level policy interventions. |
| Minji Kim |
Health Promotion, Education, and Behavior |
Dr. Minji Kim's research focuses on targeted and tailored health communication, with
emphasis on tobacco control. Dr. Kim uses quantitative and qualitative research methods
to identify various communication strategies to enhance message effectiveness for
high-risk populations, including youth and racial/ethnic minorities. Her recent projects
include examining the effects of targeted marketing and counter-marketing of emerging
tobacco products, including e-cigarettes and heated tobacco products; content analysis
and evaluation of youth-targeted vaping prevention messages; and developing and evaluating
culturally appropriate tobacco cessation messages for Asian Americans. |
| George Tam |
Health Promotion, Education, and Behavior |
As a health psychologist, Dr. Cheuk Chi (George) Tam’s current research focuses on
(1) development, implementation, and evaluation of theory-based and technology-based
psychosocial interventions for prescription opioid/drug misuse; (2) application of
mixed methods (i.e., quantitative, qualitative, and ecological momentary assessment)
to examine biopsychosocial influences on prescription opioid/drug misuse among key
populations, such as young adults, people living with HIV, and women who engaged in
sex work; (3) development, implementation, and evaluation of resilience-based multilevel
interventions to mitigate HIV-related stigma and its influences in people living with
HIV. Visit Dr. Tam's lab website. |
| Anthony Alberg |
Epidemiology |
Anthony Alberg is an epidemiologist whose research has focused on the health effects
of tobacco and tobacco control. His research focuses on the relationship of secondhand
smoke exposure to the risk of cancers other than lung cancer, as well as determinants
of adolescent smoking, and the epidemiology of smoking cessation pharmacotherapy use
in populations. Recent research has examined the role of biologically relevant genetic
variants in relation to smoking cessation. |
| Jim Thrasher |
Health Promotion, Education, and Behavior |
Dr. Thrasher’s research focuses on how media and policies influence tobacco-related
perceptions and behaviors. His projects are generally international in scope, consider
health equity concerns, and increasingly focus on challenges related to emerging tobacco
products (e.g., e-cigarettes, products that heat instead of burn tobacco, flavor capsule
cigarettes) and innovative interventions (e.g., low nicotine product standards, product
inserts to communicate with consumers). He also uses a range of experimental (e.g.,
brief, online experiments; field trials; experimental auctions; discrete choice experiments)
and observational methods (e.g., pre/post policy evaluations; cross-country studies;
ecological momentary assessment). He is an internationally-recognized expert who serves
on numerous scientific, regulatory, editorial, and advocacy workgroups and committees,
including prior service on the Food and Drug Administration’s Tobacco Products Scientific
Advisory Committee, which provides recommendations to the FDA commissioner on the
regulation of tobacco products. |
| Devin Bowes |
Enviromental Health Sciences |
Dr. Bowes's research interests are interdisciplinary with a focus on the human-environment
nexus, particularly as it relates to health outcomes due to health disparities. Her
work pioneers the field of wastewater-based epidemiology (WBE), where she leverages
community wastewater to analyze human excreted biomarkers indicative of various aspects
of human health at population-scale to encourage inclusive and data-driven decision-making.
Utilizing multiomic techniques, topics of investigation involve a myriad of applications
including dietary behavior/food insecurity, chronic illness, microbiomes, infectious
disease, and environmental exposures, and forming links to social determinants of
health. In addition, she has extensive experience applying WBE to monitor opioids
and other drugs throughout cities to support contextual, supportive, and targeted
interventions. Specific applications include assessing alcohol, tobacco, novel synthetic
opioids (NSOs), prescription drugs, illicit substances, etc. at varying degrees of
spatial granularity and in diverse population subgroups to support public health strategies.
Overall, use of WBE aims to ultimately enrich data acquisition for environmental public
health purposes and advance health equity. |