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Faculty Research, Publications Proceed Apace

The college takes enormous pride in the pioneering work of our faculty and students who are constantly creating, discovering and leading the discourse in their disciplines

The college takes enormous pride in the pioneering work of our faculty and students who are constantly creating, discovering and leading the discourse in their disciplines.  Recent research has examined teen drivers, metabolic syndrome and several other topics.  Following are highlights:
 
, Ph.D., and a colleague published  in the International Journal of Water Governance special issue on IWRM, July/August 2013.
 
, Ph.D., was guest co-editor of a special September 2013 issue of  regarding surveying of clinicians.  VanGeest co-authored the introduction to the special issue, as well as an  analyzing techniques to improve survey response.  He also will have chapters on surveying physicians and patient populations in the forthcoming , to be released by John Wiley & Sons in 2014.
 
In addition, VanGeest is co-editing, along with , Ph.D., University of Illinois at Chicago, and College of Public Health Dean , Ph.D., the Handbook of Substance Abuse Research Methods, which will be one of the first textbooks of its kind.  Published by , this comprehensive volume will feature a number of 鶹Ƶ faculty members and will present methodological and statistical techniques needed for gathering and working with data, respondents and challenges that are specific to substance abuse research.  Publication is anticipated in late 2014.
 
In the January 2014 issue of the , Jingzhen “Ginger” Yang, Ph.D., and colleagues will publish findings of their examination of parent and teen agreement on driving expectations prior to teen licensure.
 
, Ph.D., and collaborators, including recent MPH graduate Amy Lyzen, published results of their investigation into the relationship between metabolic syndrome and exercise capacity in existing cardiac rehabilitation programs in the  in July 2013.
 
Zullo, , Ph.D., assistant professor, epidemiology, and three graduate students published recently in the online Therapy.  They examined race and ethnicity factors among women with a history of myocardial infarction or coronary heart disease who were trying to lose weight.  Collaborators included Shane Brady, MPH ’12; Fan Shen, MHP ’13; and Julie T. Schaefer, doctoral student.

POSTED: Wednesday, November 13, 2013 12:00 AM
Updated: Saturday, December 3, 2022 01:02 AM
WRITTEN BY:
College of Public Health