| Program
Faculty
Program faculty consist
of a set of Core and Contributing Faculty. Core Program Faculty
serve on the Advisory Committee to oversee the training program.
In addition, they serve as substantive and methodological resources
to the training program (e.g., present seminars and colloquia,
serve on Supervisory Committees, provide individual substantive
and methodological consultation); teach the prevention science
course and integrated seminars, described below; and serve as
senior mentors to trainees. All Faculty have major research projects
to which trainees may be assigned for their research internships.
Core Faculty
- Paula Nurius,
Program Director,
- Professor of Social
Work, received her PhD in Social Welfare and Social Psychology
in 1984 from the University of Michigan. Dr. Nurius has expertise
in social cognitive models of self-concept development and functioning,
stress and coping, and violence against women. Her current research
focuses on risk and protective factors relating to women's mental
health and prevention of violence and traumatic stress associated
with sexual assault and intimate partner violence (IPV). She
has served as PI on a number of grants, including NIMH funding
and serves as grant reviewer for NIMH. She is engaged in a number
of collaborative projects, including study of IPV with the Harborview
Injury Prevention and Research Center, longitudinal analysis
of IPV risks and effects among low income women, and sexual
violence prevention programming. She is the former Director
of the University of Washington's PhD Program in Social Welfare,
served as senior mentor and a Governing Board member for the
school's Social Work Prevention Research Center, and has served
as consultant to and evaluator of doctoral programs nationally.
- nurius@u.washington.edu
- Richard
Catalano,
- Professor of Social
Work, received his PhD in Sociology from the University of Washington
in 1982. He is the Director of the Social
Development Research Group (SDRG) and is PI and Co-PI on
several federally funded research grants investigating the etiology
of adolescent problem behavior and the efficacy of family, school,
and community prevention programs. Dr. Catalano is an expert
on risk and protective factor models of prevention and on community-based
research. His primary specialization is prevention of adolescent
problem behaviors including delinquency, substance abuse, and
academic failure, and the impact of culture on intervention.
- catalano@u.washington.edu
- Mark Courtney,
- Professor of Social
Work, received his PhD from the School of Social Welfare at
the University of California, Berkeley. Before joining the UWSSW,
Dr. Courtney was the McCormick Tribune Professor at the University
of Chicago School of Social Service Administration and served
as the Director of the Chapin Hall Center for Children from
2001 to 2006. Dr. Courtney, a leading expert on child welfare
services in the United States, joined the faculty of the University
of Washington School of Social Work in July 2007 as the Ballmer
Chair in Child Well-Being and Director of the new center, Partners
for Our Children. He has conducted extensive research on individual,
family, and societal contributors to the well-being of children
placed in out-of-home care. Mark focuses on applied research;
his studies involve active collaboration with multiple stakeholders
in the policy and practice communities to determine how to improve
children’s services nationally.
- Lewayne
Gilchrist,
- Professor Emeritus
of Social Work, completed her PhD at the University of Washington
in 1979 and has been on the faculty of the UW since 1986. From
1988 to 1995, Dr. Gilchrist served as the School of Social Work's
Associate Dean for Research. Since 1979 Dr. Gilchrist's personal
scholarly work has combined cognitive-behavioral methods with
theories from social psychology and human growth and development
to devise and test health promotion and problem prevention interventions
for women, children, and adolescents. Her research has addressed
such specific issues as contraception motivation and prevention
of early and unwanted pregnancy, prevention of drug and alcohol
use, prevention of health problems related to risky sexual behavior,
and promotion of the optimal development of children born to
teenage mothers. She is currently completing a 19-year study
of the mental health, growth, and development of adolescent
mothers and their children for which she serves as Principal
Investigator.
- lewlew@u.washington.edu
- David Hawkins,
- Kozmetsky Professor
of Prevention, Professor of Social Work, and founding Director
of Social Development Research Group, received his PhD in Sociology
from Northwestern University in 1975. His research focuses on
understanding and preventing child and adolescent health and
behavior problems. Dr. Hawkins has a long and distinguished
record of research identifying risk and protective factors for
adolescent problem behaviors, and for developing and testing
innovative prevention interventions. He has been PI, Co-PI,
or Investigator on numerous federally funded grants, including
grants from NIMH. Currently, he is PI or Co-PI on five federally
funded research grants.
- jdh@u.washington.edu
- Robert
McMahon,
- Professor, Department
of Psychology, received his PhD in Clinical Psychology from
the University of Georgia in 1979. He has published extensively
on the development of child conduct problems and interventions
for these problems. Dr. McMahon is a member of the core scientific
group of the Tobacco Etiology Research Network (TERN) sponsored
by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and a member of the Evaluation
Advisory Panel for the "Free To Grow" National Demonstration
Project. He has served as a PI on the NIMH Multisite Prevention
of Adolescent Conduct Problems project (Fast Track) since its
inception in 1990. He is the Editor-in-Chief of the journal
"Prevention Science."
- mcmahon@u.washington.edu
- Diane Morrison,
- Professor of Social
Work, received her PhD in Social Psychology in 1982. She has
been PI, Co-PI, or Investigator on 17 federally funded studies.
She is currently co-PI of four studies: a study of young mothers
who bore children as teenagers, and their children; a secondary
analysis of data from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent
Health; an experiment examining the effects of alcohol consumption
and alcohol expectancies on condom negotiation among women;
and a developmental project exploring sexual health education
needs among GLBTIQ teens. Her area of expertise is cognitive
models of decision making, and contraception and disease prevention
behaviors. She has published extensively on these topics.
- dmm@u.washington.edu
- David Takeuchi,
- a sociologist,
is currently Professor in the University of Washington School
of Social Work and Department of Sociology. Dr. Takeuchi has
substantial administrative background including leadership positions
with NIMH-funded Centers, academic institutions (UCLA, Indiana
University, and University of Washington), non-government associations
(American Sociological Association, National Asian Women’s
Health Organization, Institute of Medicine), and government
organization (National Institutes of Health, Surgeon General’s
Office, National Center on Health Statistics). He currently
serves as Associate Dean for Research in the School of Social
Work. In addition to research and administrative experience,
Takeuchi has an extensive background in mentoring junior scholars
especially researchers from underrepresented racial and ethnic
minority groups. He is active in the American Sociological Association’s
Minority Fellowship Program, is Co-Director of the NIMH-funded
postdoctoral training program, the Family Research Consortium
IV, and currently serves as a mentor to graduate students and
postdoctoral fellows across the nation.
- Dr. Takeuchi has
conducted some of the largest community research studies on
Asian Americans. He has published on issues related to racial
minorities with a special focus on health using epidemiologic
and longitudinal data. He has considerable experience in conducting
large scale surveys and analyzing large data sets, and is currently
the Principal Investigator, along with Margarita Alegria of
Cambridge Health Alliance, of the National Latino and Asian
American Study (NLAAS). This psychiatric epidemiologic study
is the first national study of Asian and Latino ethnic groups
and involves a host of measures including psychiatric symptoms
and diagnoses, life events, chronic strain, self-esteem, social
support, social networks, and demographic factors. It uses a
sophisticated systematic stratified sampling method to select
interviewees for the study.
- dt5@u.washington.edu
- Edwina
Uehara,
- Dean and Professor
of Social Work, received her PhD in 1989. She currently is a
collaborator with investigators at the NIMH-funded UCLA National
Research Center on Asian-American Mental Health (NRCAAMH) at
the University of California, Davis and PI on a study of Service
Pathways of Asian Americans that is funded by an NIMH grant
to the Center. She is an expert on culturally specific models
of social support and models of assessing mental health. She
has been a leader at the School in launching research involving
cultural minorities. Dr. Uehara has served as PI on grants from
public and private sources, including NIMH.
- eddi@u.washington.edu
- Elizabeth
Wells,
- Research Professor
of Social Work and Director of Research Operations (previously
in the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences) received
her PhD in Clinical Psychology. Her research focuses on prevention
of HIV among adolescents and adult injection drug users and
on prevention and treatment of substance use. She has been PI
on a 10-year NIDA-funded longitudinal study of children's health
risk behavior, including substance use and sexual behavior and
of two studies of brief Motivational Enhancement interventions
with adult drug users, one focusing on street cocaine use and
the other on HIV and Hepatitis risk behavior among opiate users.
She is currently co-PI with Dr. Morrison of a study of health
education needs of GLBTQ teens and a co-investigator of a NIDA-funded
study of motivational intervention with homeless teens.
- bwells@u.washington.edu
Contributing Faculty
- Michael
Arthur,
- Research Associate
Professor with the School of Social Work, has been an active
researcher with The Social Development Research Group since
1991with an extensive research background in adolescent antisocial
behavior, state and community prevention systems, and prevention
research methodology. His training background in community psychology
with postdoctoral training in prevention research from Yale
University Department of Psychology position him well as a training
resource in community interventions, diffusion, and community
adaptation and adoption of preventive interventions. He has
been PI, Co-Investigator, or Project Director on multiple projects
since 1991, with special emphasis on community level interventions
and analysis.
- marthur@u.washington.edu
-
- Theodore
Beauchaine,
- Robert Bolles &
Yasuko Endo Associate Professor in the Department of Psychology,
received his doctorate at SUNY Stonybrook in 2000. His primary
research interests lie in examining the motivational and emotional
substrates of psychopathology in children, particularly the
contributions of specific neural systems to behavioral approach,
avoidance, and self-regulation, and how individual differences
in the functioning of these neural systems give rise to behavior
problems, including ADHD, conduct disorder, substance abuse,
anxiety, and depression.
- Ana Mari
Cauce,
- Earl Carlson Professor
of Psychology, Professor of American Ethnic Studies, and Executive
Vice Provost of the University of Washington. She has a long
history of research with at-risk minority youth and has focused
on at-risk children, adolescents, and families; homeless youth;
adolescent substance abuse; and community psychology.
- cauce@u.washington.edu
- Noel Chrisman,
- Professor of Nursing
in the Department of Psychosocial and Community Health at the
University of Washington. He is the founding professor and current
lead advisor of the oldest Graduate Program in Cross Cultural
Nursing in the United States (1974) and directed the Graduate
Program in Advanced Community Health Nursing from 1989 to 2001,
where he continues to lecture and supervise the clinical work
of both graduate and undergraduate students. Dr. Chrisman has
been active in publications, lectures, and workshops about cross
cultural nursing nationally and internationally for more than
30 years. In addition, his work for the past 20 years has been
on what is now called "Community-Based Participatory Research."
Funded projects have included the Commit trial in the mid 80s;
the "Wellness and Spirituality" Project with the Yakama
Indian Nation in the early to mid-1990s; the CDC-funded Urban
Research Center, "Seattle Partners for Healthy Communities,"
from 1995-2004; and the CDC-funded REACH 2010 project (Racial
and Ethnic Approaches to Community Health) from 1999 to the
present. His roles in the latter two projects have been as evaluator
and consultant.
- noelj@u.washington.edu
- Tracy Harachi,
- Associate Professor
of Social Work, received her PhD from the University of Washington
in 1991. Her research focus seeks to understand the familial
and environmental processes that influence and impact youth,
particularly involving immigrants and other communities of color,
and to develop or evaluate preventive interventions that support
the healthy development of youth within an ecological context.
In addition to studies examining youth development, she is interested
in ways in which prevention science can be embodied within community
systems, for example, through the adoption of efficacious interventions
by schools and communities or the creation of surveillance systems
on social and behavioral indicators to provide feedback for
community planning. She is Principal Investigator on the Cross-Cultural
Families project funded by NIMH/NICHD which is a longitudinal
study examining the developmental trajectories of Cambodian
and Vietnamese children. She is also Co-P.I. and Investigator
on two NIDA funded school- and family-based preventive intervention
studies. She has extensive experience conducting research within
immigrant communities, including overseeing the translation
of survey measures into a number of different languages, conducting
cognitive pretesting, examining measurement equivalence and
recruiting immigrant families to participate in parenting workshops.
Her expertise related to issues among the Asian Pacific Islander
populations has been utilized by a number of organizations such
as the United Nations Asia and Far East Institute for the Prevention
of Crime and the Treatment of Offenders, Asian American Pacific
Islander Youth Development and Violence Prevention Workgroup,
Hmong Strengthening Families Project, Japan Ministry of Health
and Welfare and Drug Abuse Prevention Center, and Social Services
of Cambodia. She is a member of the NIDA Services Research Review
Committee-F and has reviewed for SNEM II, as well as specials
for NICHD and NIMH.
- tharachi@u.washington.edu
- Wayne Katon,
- Professor of Psychiatry,
Director of the Division of Health Services and Epidemiology,
and Vice Chair of the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral
Sciences at the University of Washington Medical School, received
his MD from the University of Oregon in 1978 and served
his residency in Psychiatry at the University of Washington.
He is Director of an NIMH-funded National Research Service Award
Primary Care-Psychiatry Fellowship that has successfully trained
psychiatrists and primary care physicians for academic leadership
positions. Dr. Katon is internationally renowned for his research
on the prevalence of anxiety and depressive disorders in primary
care, the relationship of psychiatric disorders to medically
unexplained symptoms such as headache and fatigue, and the impact
of depression and anxiety on patients with chronic medical illness.
In recent years, his research has focused on developing innovative
models of integrating mental health professionals and other
allied health personnel into primary care to improve the care
of patients with major depression and panic disorder. Dr. Katon
has been awarded the American Academy of Family Practice Award
for Excellence in Teaching in Primary Care numerous times. He
also has been awarded the Academy of Psychosomatic Medicine
Research Award (1993) and the American Psychiatric Association
Senior Scholar Health Services Research Award (1999). Dr. Katon
has written over 325 peer-reviewed journal articles and chapters,
as well as Panic Disorder in the Medical Setting, a book for
primary care physicians.
- Maureen
Marcenko,
- Associate Professor
of Social Work, completed her PhD at McGill University in 1988.
She is Director of Policy and Evaluation for the newly formed
child welfare center, Partners for Our Children, and an affiliate
of the Center on Infant Mental Health. Dr. Marcenko’s
research focuses on the well-being of diverse children and families
with an emphasis on the development and testing of interventions
within public child welfare and other public service systems.
Dr. Marcenko is committed to producing research that is rigorous,
culturally sensitive, participatory, and easily accessible to
consumers, practitioners, and policy makers. She is a Co-Investigator
for the Fostering Families Project, an NIMH-funded project designed
to test two interventions with young children in foster care
and their caregivers.
- mmarcenk@u.washington.edu
- Peter Pecora,
- Senior Director
of Research Services for the Casey Family Programs and Professor,
School of Social Work, obtained his PhD from the University
of Washington in 1982. Dr. Pecora brings expertise
in child welfare systems reform, evaluating services for high
risk families, and promoting resilience in at-risk and children
who are placed in foster care. Dr. Pecora has provided training
to program leaders and staff in United States, Canada, Italy,
Great Britain, and Portugal. He has served as an expert witness
for the states of Florida, New Mexico, Washington, and Wisconsin.
His co-authored books and articles focus on child welfare program
design, administration, and research. He has been consulted
regarding evaluation of child and family services to the U.S.
Department of Health and Human Services, and a number of foundations
including the Annie E. Casey Foundation, Colorado Trust, Edna
McConnell Clark Foundation, McKnight Foundation, and the Stuart
Foundation. He received a short-term J. William Fulbright Scholarship
for Australia for Fall 2002.
- ppecora@casey.org
- Frederick
Rivara,
- Professor of Pediatrics
and Epidemiology, Head of the Division of General Pediatrics,
Vice Chair of the Department of Pediatrics, and Editor of Archives
of Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine, received his MD from
the University of Pennsylvania in 1974. He also holds an MPH
from the University of Washington. He is currently Director
of the CDC-funded Harborview Injury Prevention and Research
Center and serves as PI or Co-PI on grants from the NIAAA, NIMH,
and RWJ foundation. Dr. Rivara holds an endowed professorship,
has been recipient of major awards (e.g., the Distinguished
Career Award from the American Public Health Association and
the Physician Achievement Award from the American Academy of
Pediatrics) and has a long record of service on national advisory
boards and as a grant reviewer. He is internationally recognized
for his expertise in injury prevention in children.
- Dr. Rivara's research
is devoted to the prevention and control of injuries to children
and adolescents. Intentional and unintentional injuries are
the leading cause of death for children between 1 and 19 years
of age, accounting for more deaths than the next 10 leading
causes combined. As research projects, Dr. Rivara is involved
in analytical epidemiological studies to understand and identify
the groups at highest risk of injury, determine host, agent,
and environmental risk factors for injury, and find factors
that decrease the risk of injury or of poor outcome once injured.
After identification of risk and protective factors, Dr. Rivara
has also conducted intervention studies both in clinical settings
and as community intervention trials. This has included investigation
of trauma and acute care of the injured patient and in rehabilitation.
- For more information:
http://depts.washington.edu/hiprc
- fpr@u.washington.edu
- Roger Roffman,
- Professor of Social
Work, received his DSW in 1983 from the University of California,
Berkeley. He is Director of the Innovative Programs Research
Group. His research focuses on the design and evaluation of
interventions in the fields of drug dependence and HIV-prevention.
Over a period of 15 years, funding from NIDA, CSAT, and the
University of Washington Alcohol and Drug Abuse Institute has
supported a series of randomized controlled trials evaluating
interventions targeting marijuana-dependent adults and adolescents.
NIMH, CDC, and the Seattle-King County Department of Public
Health have funded a series of seven HIV-prevention studies,
over a 15-year period, designed to evaluate both counseling
and community-level interventions with gay and bisexual men,
and with women and adolescents residing in urban public housing
developments. He has served as an ad hoc grant reviewer for
NIAAA, NIDA, NIMH, and CSAT.
- roffman@u.washington.edu
- Susan Spieker,
- Professor, Department
of Parent and child Nursing, received her PhD in Developmental
Psychology at Cornell University in 1982. Her primary interests
are in attachment-related prevention efforts with parents of
infants and toddlers. She is an affiliate of the Center on Human
Development and Disability and Director of the Center on Infant
Mental Health and Development. Her primary interests are in
attachment-related prevention efforts with parents of infants
and toddlers. Dr. Spieker's research involves longitudinal analysis
of the effects of early experience, specifically early caregiving
experience, and on the socio-emotional development of infants
and children. She is currently PI of an NIMH clinical trial,
"Promoting Infant Mental Health in Foster Care.”
- spieker@u.washington.edu
- http://www.son.washington.edu/certif-imh/
- Elaine
Thompson,
- Professor in the
Psychosocial and Community Health within the University of Washington's
School of Nursing, obtained her Doctorate in Sociology from
the University of Washington. Dr. Thompson is an adolescent
psychosocial nurse and nurse researcher, with extensive training
and experience in survey research, experimental design, and
advanced analytic methods. She has also received funding from
The National Institute of Nursing Research and The National
Institute of Mental Health for suicide prevention and school
dropout prevention research. Her research specializations are
1) intervention and evaluation research; 2) advanced multivariate
analytic techniques; 3) measurement and instrument development;
and 4) testing intervention theory. Her clinical specializations
are 1) family, child, and adolescent psychosocial nursing; 2)
suicide risk assessment; and 3) stress and self-management.
She is currently a senior prevention scientist and principal
investigator on the Reconnecting Youth Prevention Research Program.
This multi-faceted program focuses on testing school-based models
for preventing suicidal behaviors, depression, drug abuse and
school dropout among high-risk youth, and the effect of psychosocial
risk and protective factors on adolescent development within
family, friendship, and school context.
- elainet@u.washington.edu
- Karina
L. Walters,
- Associate Professor
of Social work, received her PhD from the University of California,
Los Angeles in 1995. Dr. Walters is the William B. and
Ruth Gerberding Endowed Professor of Social Work and the Director
of the Indigenous Wellness Research Institute. She brings an
emphasis on multicultural health/mental health, specifically
on how identity attitudes among oppressed populations impact
psychological and physical well-being (primary focus is on urban
American Indian populations). Her research includes attention
to alcohol use, HIV/AIDS, and cultural mediators of coping.
- kw5@u.washington.edu
- Carolyn
Webster-Stratton,
- Professor, School
of Nursing, received her PhD in Educational Psychology/Child
Psychology in 1980, and completed post-doctoral training in
Child Psychology at the University of Washington. She is Director
of the University
of Washington Parenting Clinic and is a nationally recognized
researcher in the areas of parenting, child conduct problems,
and promoting young children's social skills and problem-solving.
In recent years she has become involved in evaluating her parent,
teacher, and child training programs as early school-based prevention
programs (preschool through grade three) with the goal of reducing
violence and drug abuse in later years. In the past 15 years,
she has been P.I. or Co-P.I. for 13 federally funded research
grants. She is P.I. on a grant from NINR, developing, evaluating,
and improving early intervention programs for families with
young children with ODD/CD. Dr. Webster-Straton is also funded
by a NIDA prevention grant evaluating their teacher training
and child Dinosaur curriculum in the classroom as well as their
parent program in the schools. This will be offered to kindergarten
and grade one students. She is also P.I. on an ACYF grant that
takes a clinic-based treatment program for conduct disorders
and evaluates its efficacy as a classroom-based early intervention
program for preventing the development of ODD and early-onset
conduct problems.
- cws@u.washington.edu
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