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• Lawrence
Palinkas
is Professor in the schools of Anthropology and Social Work and
is a medical anthropologist at the University of Southern California
with expertise in qualitative methods. Dr. Palinkas’ expertise
includes use of qualitative methods in the study of health services,
implementation of evidence-based practice, need for mental health
services, immigrant/refugee health, and group dynamics under extreme
conditions. He has received funding from the National Science Foundation
has been a committee member of the National Research Council, National
Academy of Sciences, and the Institute of Medicine.
• Donald
Slymen is Professor in the Division of Epidemiology and
Biostatistics in the School of Public Health at San Diego State
University with extensive expertise in epidemiology, multi-level
and mixed-effect models, and clinical trial design and analysis.
He has been a co-investigator on a number of NIH and other collaborative
research studies with faculty at San Diego State University and
CASRC including studies of implementation of evidence-based practice,
mental health services for youths in the child-welfare system, behavioral
interventions to reduce or prevent smoking, alter nutritional habits,
improve exercise, and other preventive and health services studies.
The Methods
& Statistics Group is coordinated by Gregory
Aarons and Michael
Hurlburt, Research Scientists at CASRC. Senior members of the
Methods and Statistics Group include:
C.
Hendricks Brown
is Professor of Epidemiology and Biostatistics at the College of
Public Health, University of South Florida. He also holds adjunct
professor positions in the Department of Biostatistics and the Department
of Mental Health at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public
Health and is a Senior Research Scholar at the American Institutes
for Research. Dr. Brown directs the Prevention Science Methodology
Group - a consortium of nationally prominent methodologists as part
of his NIH funded grant “Methodology for MH/Drug Prevention
& Early Intervention.”
Laura
Dunn is
Assistant Professor in Residence in the Department of Psychiatry
at the University of California, San Diego. Dr. Dunn’s work
examines ethics issues in mental health research including informed
consent in patients with schizophrenia and other major mental illnesses,
improving the process of informed consent to optimize research participants’
abilities to provide valid consent for research, decision-making
capacity in patients with mental illness, and research ethics. She
and colleague Barton Palmer have developed video-based training
for informed consent for children and adolescents and their families.
Celia B. Fisher is Marie Ward Doty
Professor of Psychology and Director of the Fordham University Center
for Ethics Education, is a member of the DHHS Secretary’s
Advisory Committee on Human Research Protections (SACHRP), Co-Chair
of the SACHRP Subcommittee on Research Involving Children. She chaired
the American Psychological Association’s (APA ) Ethics Code
Task Force, the Ethics Committee of the Society for Research in
Child Development, and the Institute of Medicine's Committee on
Clinical Research Involving Children.
Robert Gibbons is Professor of Biostatistics
and Director of the Center for Health Statistics at University of
Illinois at Chicago. Dr. Gibbons is a member of the Institute of
Medicine of the National Academy of Science, is a fellow of the
American Statistical Association, and is internationally known for
developing innovative statistical approaches to mental health and
health services data. Dr. Gibbons current NIH supported work includes
4 grants: “Mixed-Effects ZIP Models-Mental Health Service
Research,” “Antidepressant Treatment and Suicidality:
Biostatistical / Methodological Solutions,” “Mental
Health Computerized Adaptive Testing,” and “Computerized
Adaptive Testing - Depression Inventory.”
Barton
Palmer is
Associate Professor in the Department of Psychiatry at the University
of California, San Diego and the San Diego Veterans Affairs Medical
Center. Dr. Palmer’s work examines neuropsychological aspects
of schizophrenia and other psychiatric conditions and the impact
of cognitive deficits on patients' everyday functioning and their
capacity to consent to treatment and research participation. Drs.
Palmer and Dunn have developed video-based training for informed
consent for children and adolescents and their families. Dr. Palmer’s
current NIH supported grants on ethics include R01MH064722 “Capacity
to Consent to Research on Psychosis” and R01AG028827 “Enhancing
Consent for Alzheimer Research.”
Scott Roesch
is Associate Professor and a quantitative psychologist and statistician
in the Department of Psychology at San Diego State University. His
areas of expertise include latent variable modeling, meta-analysis,
mixed-effects models, and general growth mixture modeling. His substantive
interests include trait-state models of stress and coping; coping
with physical illness, and particularly cancer; cultural, ethnic,
and acculturation differences in stress and coping; cross-ethnic
measurement equivalence.
Methods
and Statistics Clinic:
Consultation from Drs. Palinkas, Slymen, and Roesch is available
year-round to CASRC investigators and post-doctoral fellows at the
twice monthly Methods and Statistics Clinic. The clinic is held
on-site at the CASRC offices. Other senior members are available
for consultation on an as-needed basis. CASRC investigators regularly
participate in Dr. Hendricks Brown’s weekly NIH supported
Prevention Science Methodology Group teleconference meetings.
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