Follow University of Florida College of Public Health and Health Professions faculty, students, staff and alumni as they participate in conferences and meetings across the globe.
November
Nicole Garcia, Jennifer White, and Madison Yoder, second-year students in the master’s in communications sciences and disorders program, and former students Sarah Blankenship and Jenna Kasten, along with Candice Adams-Mitchell, SLP.D., CCC-SLP, a clinical assistant professor and director of undergraduate studies in the department of speech, language, and hearing sciences, have been chosen to present at the 2023 American Speech-Language-Hearing Association, or ASHA, Convention in Boston, Massachusetts, from November 16 to 18. Their presentation titled “The Evolution of Instagram Reels as a Health Literacy Tool for Vocal Health Awareness” is among 117 selected out of 3,400 submissions and is designated as an ASHA Convention Changemaker Session. ASHA serves as the national professional, scientific and credentialing association for audiologists, speech-language pathologists and speech, language and hearing scientists, as well as audiology and speech-language pathology assistants and students.
Shangchen Song, a Ph.D. student in the department of biostatistics, received a $1,000 Ph.D. travel award from the department to attend the 2023 American Public Health Association annual meeting in Atlanta, Georgia, from November 12-15. Song received the Applied Public Health Statistics Stata Scholar Award for his presentation “Analyzing Test-negative Design Study Data with Cox Regression,” beating out finalists from Harvard University and the University of Maryland
Faculty and students in the social and behavioral sciences concentration in the Master of Public Health and PhD in public health programs were well represented at the American Public Health Association (APHA) annual meeting in Atlanta, Georgia, November 12-15, with several poster, roundtable and oral presentations. Highlights included Alex Rodriguez, a Ph.D. student, winning the “Best Student Poster Presentation” from the APHA’s Integrative, Complementary, and Traditional Health Practices section, and Julia Varnes, Ph.D., M.P.H., MCHES, an associate clinical professor and director of the master’s in public health program, serving as the keynote speaker at the Disability Section Mentorship luncheon.
Occupational therapy students presented their research posters at the Florida Occupational Therapy Association (FOTA) annual conference in Clearwater, Florida, on November 4-5. Becky Piazza, O.T.D., M.S., OTR/L, BCPR, a clinical assistant professor at the department of occupational therapy, also presented at the conference. View more photos at UF presence at FOTA.
Inyoung Jun, a Ph.D. student in epidemiology, received the Mogam Science Scholarship from the Korean American Society in Biotech and Pharmaceuticals, or KASBP.
The MOGAM-KASBP Scholarship program supports undergraduate and graduate students pursuing science-related disciplines at universities or scientific institutions outside of the Republic of Korea. Jun was recognized for her scientific achievements and potential to be an important contributor in the field of biomedical and pharmaceutical science. In addition to travel expenses, Jun will receive a $5,000 scholarship. She will travel to the 2023 Fall KASBP Symposium in New Jersey, November 3-4, to present her doctoral research.
Nora Cleary, a Ph.D. student in One Health, in the department of environmental and global health, received the 2023 Annual Meeting Travel award from the American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, also known as ASTMH. The annual meeting will be held in Chicago October 18-22. The travel award is supported in part by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and is one of the Society’s premier awards, which is both honorific and substantive and demonstrates the Society’s focus on professional development and career advancement and facilitates participation of select tropical medicine researchers and trainees from around the world. The award includes travel expenses and a $600 stipend to offset costs associated with travel related expenses.
KD Jacobs, a 2022 Ph.D. graduate in public health with a social and behavioral sciences concentration and 2019 Bachelor of Public Health alum, presented a poster titled “Adaptation of the Self-Report SF-36v2 and SF-12v2 to Proxy-Reported Outcome Measures” at the International Society for Quality-of-Life Research (ISOQOL) in Calgary, Canada October 18-21. Jacobs and collaborators, Jamie Pomeranz, Ph.D., CRC, CLCP, director of the Bachelor of Health Science program, clinical professor in the department of Occupational Therapy, and Michelle (White) Carty, Ph.D., conducted a literature review to identify best practices for modifying existing patient-reported outcome measures to proxy-reported outcome measures and adapted two quality of life questionnaires into proxy-reported outcome measures.
September
Elizabeth Evans, a Ph.D. student in rehabilitation science, and Amber Gerasimchik, a student in the Doctor of Audiology program, each received Saffran Student Scholar Awards to attend the 17th Annual Eleanor M. Saffran Conference on Cognitive Neuroscience and Rehabilitation of Communication Disorders September 29-30 at Temple University. Evans will present research related to health care access issues among the deaf and hard of hearing. Gerasimchik will present on mental health issues among the deaf and hard of hearing.
A team of PHHP faculty and staff will present at the Nexus Summit 2023 Working Together for Impact Conference on September 28 with their presentation titled, “Revolutionizing Inclusive Care: Impactful Interprofessional Experiences for Dental and OT Students Focused on Patients with Sensory Sensitivities and Chronic Pain.” Becky Piazza, O.T.D., M.S., OTR/L, a clinical assistant professor in the department of occupational therapy, spearheaded a course development team collaboration with Olga Ensz, D.M.D., M.P.H., a clinical assistant professor in the UF College of Dentistry. PHHP instructional designers Truly Hardemon and Lior Flum, and media specialist Shena Hayes, along with College of Dentistry instructional designer Margeaux Johnson, worked with faculty to design and implement an interactive synchronous virtual class that included video footage of professional dental providers, an occupational therapy researcher and patients/caregivers, in addition to simulated medical charts.
Melanie Orejuela, SBS MPH student, presented a poster at the National Hispanic Science Network’s 23rd Annual International Conference in Washington DC in September 2023. This years theme was “Deconstructing Hispanic Health Inequities: Translating Science in an Evolving Landscape”. She presented on the development and culturally relevant community suicide needs assessment tool for Puerto Rico that is all in Spanish. Melanie said “it was such a wonderful experience to connect with other researchers who are working towards reducing health disparities affecting U.S. Latino communities”.
PHHP alumna Brandy Stone, M.P.H., community health director with Gainesville Fire and Rescue, and Julia Varnes, Ph.D., director of the college’s M.P.H. program, presented at the City of Gainesville Gun Violence Prevention Summit August 6-7. They reviewed the Social Ecological Model as a tool for developing actionable policies and practices.
First-year Doctor of Occupational Therapy students presented posters on the projects they created for their summer psychosocial fieldwork sites on August 8 in the HPNP Complex. The students worked with community sites in Gainesville and Ocala, including The Village, Transitions Life Center, Life Transition Skills and the Florida Recovery Center.
Neuropsychologists from the department of clinical and health psychology had a strong showing at the recent executive board meeting of the Society for Clinical Neuropsychology (American Psychological Association division 40), held during the APA annual convention in Washington, D.C. UF-affiliated division 40 executive members include PHHP clinical and health psychology faculty members Dawn Bowers, Ph.D., a professor, Catherine Price, Ph.D., an associate professor, and Franchesca Arias, Ph.D., an assistant professor who is joining as head of the Ethnic-Minority Affairs Committee. Several alumni of the UF Ph.D. program in clinical psychology also serve on the committee, including Callie Dunn, Ph.D., Vonetta Dotson, Ph.D., and Tricia Zawacki, Ph.D.
Andres Manrique, Ph.D. student in the department of environmental and global health, presented educational intervention results at the International Society of Exposure Science conference held in Chicago August 27-31.
The department of speech, language, and hearing sciences was well-represented at the Florida Association of Speech-Language Pathologists and Audiologists annual convention July 13-17 in Orlando, with multiple oral and poster presentations by students and faculty.
Occupational therapy alumnae Noelle Joyner, O.T.D., OTR/L, and Heather Simpson, O.T.D., OTR/L, presented at the World Parkinson Congress in Barcelona. Joyner implemented and studied a novel therapy program that integrated principles from Parkinson Wellness Recovery – PWR! Moves, a physical therapy regimen that targets skills that can help people with Parkinson’s disease. She designed the research protocol with guidance from Norman Fixel Institute for Neurological Diseases staff, PWR!Moves founder Becky Farley and Chiung-ju (CJ) Liu, Ph.D., OTR/L, associate professor in the department of occupational therapy. Learn more.
Chiung-ju (CJ) Liu, Ph.D., an associate professor in the department of occupational therapy, was selected for the 2023 National Institutes of Health mHealth Training Institute. She was the only occupational therapy scientist selected for the highly-competitive program. Liu attended the in-person institute June 16-20 at the University of California, Los Angeles.
Two first-year Ph.D. students in biostatistics, Xin Ma and Fengdi Zhao, presented their research at the International Conference on Intelligent Biology and Medicine July 16-19 in Tampa. Xin’s research, “Integrated Spatial Multi-omics Analysis Based on MALDI Data,” which is jointly supervised by Li Chen, Ph.D., an associate professor of biostatistics, and Ramon Sun, Ph.D., a UF associate professor of biochemistry, received a flash platform presentation award. Fengdi received a travel award to present his research, “A Novel Statistical method for Differential Analysis of Single-Cell Chromatin Accessibility Sequencing Data,” which was completed under Chen’s supervision.
Claudia Senesac Ph.D., M.S., and Doctor of Physical Therapy Class of 2025 Students Jaden Anderson, Briana Dentry, Tara Kochey and Melyn Jessel attended the Parent Project Muscular Dystrophy Annual Conference (PPMD) in Dallas, Texas, June 29-July 1. This was a great opportunity for DPT Students from the Pediatrics in Physical Therapy course (PHT 6322) to learn about the latest research into Becker Muscular Dystrophy and Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy from researchers and health care practitioners, and to gain hands on experience working and having fun with real patients and their families.
Arkaprava Roy, Ph.D., an assistant professor of biostatistics, received a new researcher travel award from the Institute of Mathematical Statistics. The award provides funding to IMS members who have received their Ph.D. within the past five years to attend any IMS-sponsored or co-sponsored meeting where they will present a paper or poster.
Peihua Qiu, Ph.D., dean’s professor and founding chair of the department of biostatistics, gave a keynote presentation titled “Recent statistical process control methods for dynamic disease screening and spatio-temporal disease surveillance” at the 2023 INFORMS Conference on Quality, Statistics, and Reliability held June 6-8 at North Carolina State University. In the talk, he provided an overview on the sequence of new concepts and methods developed by his research group for disease screening and disease surveillance, which initiated several new research directions related to online monitoring of dynamic and/or spatial processes.
Mark Britton, a Ph.D. student in epidemiology, was selected to receive a UF Graduate Student Council travel award for his attendance at the Research Society on Alcohol Annual Meeting, June 24-28 in Bellevue, Washington. He presented a poster entitled “Pre-Intervention Drinks/Month and HIV Serostatus Interactively Predict Memory Change After 30-Day Alcohol Contingency Management.” Britton is mentored by Robert Cook, M.D., M.P.H., a professor of epidemiology and director of the Southern HIV and Alcohol Research Consortium. Read more
Sherrilene Classen, Ph.D., professor and chair of the department of occupational therapy, and Chiung-ju (CJ) Liu, Ph.D., an associate professor of occupational therapy, together with their Ph.D. mentees, Seung-Woo (Benedict) Hwangbo and Yun Chan Shin, presented at the 11th Occupational Therapy Research Summit held at The Ohio State University June 22-24. The Summit aspires to activate leadership in science so that occupational therapy scientists form and lead diverse interdisciplinary research teams to advance occupational therapy, occupational science, and improve quality of life. Classen moderated a “works in progress” session to provide feedback to junior scholars from universities across the country. Liu served as an advisory member to a collaborative activated research team who are investigating the evaluation of the home environment.
Noah Hammarlund, Ph.D., an assistant professor in the department of health services research, management and policy, was awarded a Southeastern Conference Visiting Faculty Travel Grant from the UF Office of the Provost.
Several faculty and students from the department of epidemiology attended the Society for Epidemiologic Research meeting June 13-16 in Portland, Oregon. Attendees included Stephen Kimmel, M.D., professor and chair; Yan Wang, Ph.D., an assistant professor; and Ph.D. students Kendall Robinson and Jackie Pollack.
Juan Perez-Carreno, an epidemiology Ph.D. student, was selected to receive a highly-competitive 2023 Travel Award for Early Career Investigators from the College on Problems of Drug Dependence to attend the CPDD annual meeting June 17-23 in Denver. In addition, he was invited to present a talk on his research, “Gender Differences in the Associations between Family Emotional Connection and Substance Use and Mental Health Outcomes Among Colombian Adolescents,” at the 15th InWomen’s Group conference June 16 in Denver.
Alyssa Falise, a Ph.D. in epidemiology student, received a highly-competitive 2023 CPDD FORCE Junior Investigator Travel Award from the College on Problems of Drug Dependence. The award offset her travel costs associated with attending the organization’s annual meeting June 17-23 in Denver.
The department of epidemiology was well-represented at the College on Problems of Drug Dependence annual meeting June 17-23 in Denver with attendance from teams led by Linda Cottler, Ph.D., M.P.H., dean’s professor of epidemiology; Catherine Striley, Ph.D., M.S.W., associate professor; Catalina Lopez-Quintero, M.D., Ph.D., an assistant professor; and Robert Cook, M.D., M.P.H., a professor.
May
Several faculty and students from the department of epidemiology attended and presented at the Cannabis Clinical Outcomes conference held in Orlando May 18-19.