August 2024 Publications, Presentations, Awards, and Other News
Publications
Suzanne Bakken, Sergey Kisselev, and Meghan Reading Turchioe, PhD ’18, were among the authors of “Advancing Data Science Competencies for Nursing PhD Students,” published in Studies in Health Technology and Informatics.
Veronica Barcelona was among the authors of “Sexual Orientation-Specific Policies Are Associated with Prenatal Care Use in the First Trimester Among Sexual Minority Women: Results from a Prospective Cohort Study,” published in Annals of Behavioral Medicine.
Veronica Barcelona and Yihong Zhao were among the authors of “Associations Between Individual- and Structural-Level Racism and Gestational Age at Birth in the Nulliparous Pregnancy Outcomes Study: Monitoring Mothers-to-Be,” published in Journal of Urban Health.
Melissa Beauchemin, PhD ’19, was among the authors of “Impact of the Children’s Oncology Group’s Supportive Care Clinical Practice Guideline Endorsement Program: An Institutional Survey,” published in Pediatric Blood and Cancer.
Natalie Benda and Meghan Reading Turchioe, PhD ’18, were among the authors of “Reach, Acceptability, and Patient Preferences of a Mobile Health-Based Survey to Assess COVID-19 Vaccine Hesitancy Among Patients Receiving Dialysis,” published in Kidney Medicine.
Leon Chen was among the authors of “A Case Study of Polypharmacy-Induced Serotonin Syndrome in a Cancer Patient,” published in Journal of the American Association of Nurse Practitioners.
Fabiana Dos Santos and Rebecca Schnall, PhD ’09, were among the authors of “Usability of a Mobile Health Technology for HIV Testing Among Sexual Minorities,” published in Studies in Health Technology and Informatics.
Ji Won Lee, Patricia Stone, Jingjing Shang, Ashley Chastain, and Andrew Dick were among the authors of “Post-Acute Care Trends and Disparities After Joint Replacements in the United States, 1991–2018: A Systematic Review,” published in Journal of the American Medical Directors Association.
Student Sarah Leonard, Jianfang Liu, Kasey Jackman, PhD ’17, and Jean-Marie Bruzzese were the authors of “Sexual and Gender Minority Sleep Health Disparities and Minority Stress in Early Adolescence,” published in Journal of Adolescent Health.
Nancy Reame was among the authors of “From Maca to Marijuana: Cultural Influences on Joint Pain Symptoms and Management in Urban Perimenopausal and Early Postmenopausal Latinas,” published in Menopause.
Student Danielle Scharp and Maxim Topaz were among the authors of “Social Determinants Documented Across Individuals from Different Racial and Ethnic Groups in Home Healthcare,” published in Studies in Health Technology and Informatics.
Rebecca Schnall, PhD ’09, Jianfang Liu, and Maeve Brin were among the authors of “Differences in Self-Reported Stress Versus Hair and Nail Cortisol Among Adolescent and Young Adult Males,” published in Nursing Research.
Jihye Kim Scroggins, student Sarah Harkins, and Veronica Barcelona were among the authors of “A Systematic Review of Community-Based Interventions to Address Perinatal Mental Health,” published in Seminars in Perinatology.
Arlene Smaldone, PhD ’03, was among the authors of “Assessing Multilevel Barriers to Hydroxyurea Adherence in Youth with Sickle Cell Disease Using Pharmacy-Based Refill Records,” published in Pediatric Blood and Cancer.
Jacquelyn Taylor was among the authors of “Childhood Racism and Cardiometabolic Risk in Latina Mothers Across the First Postpartum Year,” published in Psychosomatic Medicine.
Meghan Reading Turchioe, PhD ’18, Sergey Kisselev, and Suzanne Bakken were among the authors of “Special Issue on Teaching and Training Future Health Informaticians: Increasing Generative Artificial Intelligence Competency Among Students Enrolled in Doctoral Nursing Research Coursework,” published in Applied Clinical Informatics.
Meghan Reading Turchioe, PhD ’18, and student Christianna Pepingco were among the authors of “Nurses’ Roles in Artificial Intelligence Implementation: Results from a Mixed-Methods Study,” published in Studies in Health Technology and Informatics.
Presentations
Gregory Alexander presented “Mastering Survey Methods in Clinical Informatics Research” and “Navigating Digital Frontiers: Informatics Research in Care of Older Adults” at the 2024 Nursing Informatics Conference, held July 28-31, 2024, in Manchester, UK.
Suzanne Bakken presented “Mitigating Epistemic Injustice Through Health Informatics and Data Science” at the 2024 Nursing Informatics Conference, held July 28-31, 2024, in Manchester, UK.
Fabiana Dos Santos presented “Innovating HIV Care Delivery for Sexual Minority Groups Through mChoice App,” a technology demonstration paper, and “Usability of a Mobile Health Technology for HIV Testing Among Sexual Minorities,” a poster, at the 2024 Nursing Informatics Conference, held July 28-31, 2024, in Manchester, UK.
Sarah Rossetti, PhD ’09, was a panelist at “The CONCERN Project: Past Present Future of an Artificial-Enabled Nursing Science Project,” presented at the 2024 Nursing Informatics Conference, held July 28-31, 2024, in Manchester, UK.
Maxim Topaz presented “Co-creating Constitutional AI Principles for Nursing: A Public Deliberation Workshop,” “Risks of Artificial-Based Automated Decisions: A Nursing Workshop Towards Design Solutions,” and “Voices Unheard: Exploring New Data Sources in Nursing Through Speech Processing” at the 2024 Nursing Informatics Conference, held July 28-31, 2024, in Manchester, UK.
Meghan Reading Turchioe, PhD ’18, presented “Nurses’ Roles in Artificial Intelligence Implementation: Results from a Mixed-Methods Study” at the 2024 Nursing Informatics Conference, held July 28-31, 2024. in Manchester, UK.
Awards
The Rosalind Franklin Society honored Jean-Marie Bruzzese with the Rosalind Franklin Society Award in Science, which recognizes outstanding peer-reviewed research by women and underrepresented minorities in STEM. Bruzzese received the award for her paper in Pediatric Allergy, Immunology, and Pulmonology titled “Adolescent Views on Asthma Severity and Management During the COVID-19 Pandemic.”
Other News
Fabiana Dos Santos was invited to a media interview with HealthTeach Analytics to discuss the paper “An Example of Leveraging AI for Documentation: ChatGPT-Generated Nursing Care Plan for an Older Adult with Lung Cancer,” published in Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association.
As a consultant to the Columbia research team that conducted the study, Nancy Reame was interviewed for the CNN news article, “Tampons Contain Lead, Arsenic, and Potentially Toxic Chemicals, Study Says. Here’s What to Know,” published July 11, 2024.