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School of Social Work Research Publications

  1. West, S., Banerjee, M., Phipps, B., & Friedline, T. (2017). Coming up short: Family composition, income, and household savings. Journal of the Society for Social Work and Research, 8(3), 355-377.
  2. Rauscher, E., Friedline, T., & Banerjee, M. (2017). “We’re not rich, but we’re definitely not poor”: Young children’s conceptions of social class. Children and Youth Services Review, 83, 101-111.
  3. Friedline, T., Rauscher, E., West, S., Phipps, B., Kardash, N., Chang, K., & Eckert, M. (2017). “They will go like I did”: How parents think about college for their young children in the context of rising costs. Children and Youth Services Review, 81, 340-349.
  4. Logie, C. H., Lacombe-Duncan, A., Brien, N., Jones, N., Lee Foon, N., Levermore, K., & Newman, P. A. (2017). Barriers and motivations for HIV testing among young men who have sex with men and transgender women in Kingston, Jamaica: A qualitative study. JIAS: Journal of the International AIDS Society, 20(1).
  5. Logie, C. H., Wang, Y., Lacombe-Duncan, A., Jones, N., Ahmed, U., Levermore, K., Bryan, N., Harker, S., Marshall, A., & Newman, P. A. (2017). Factors associated with sex work involvement among transgender women in Jamaica: Results from a cross-sectional tablet based survey. JIAS: Journal of the International AIDS Society, 20(1).
  6. Logie, C. H., Lacombe-Duncan, A., Wang, Y., Kaida, A., Pokomandy, A., Webster, K., Conway, T., Dubuc, D. & Loutfy, M. R. (2017). Sexual orientation differences in health and wellbeing among women with HIV in Canada: Findings from a national cohort study. AIDS and Behavior.
  7. Kronfli, N., Lacombe-Duncan, A., Wang, Y., de Pokomandy, A., Kaida, A., Logie, C., Conway, T., Kennedy, V. L., Burchell, A., Tharao, W., Pick, N., Kestler, M., Sereda, P., & Loutfy, M. (2017). Access and engagement in HIV care among a national cohort of women living with HIV in Canada. AIDS Care, 29(10), 1235-1242.
  8. Logie, C. H., Lacombe-Duncan, A., Wagner, A., & Poteat, T. (2017). Syndemics mediate the relationship between sexual stigma and depression among sexual minority women. Women's Health Issues, 27(5), 592-599.
  9. Lacombe-Duncan, A., & Chuang, D-M. (2017). A social ecological approach to understanding life satisfaction among socioeconomically disadvantaged people living with HIV/AIDS in Taiwan. British Journal of Social Work, 48(3), 557-577.
  10. Mishna, F., McInroy, L., Daciuk, J., & Lacombe-Duncan, A. (2017). Adapting to attrition challenges in multi-year studies: Examples from a study of bullying and cyber-bullying. Children and Youth Services Review, 81, 268-271.
  11. Kronfli, N., Lacombe-Duncan, A., Wang, C., de Pokomandy, A., Kaida, A., Logie, C. H., Conway, T., Kennedy, V. L., Burchell, A., Tharao, W., Pick, N., Kestler, M., Sereda, P. & Loutfy, M., on behalf of the CHIWOS Research Team. (2017). Understanding the correlates of attrition associated with antiretroviral use and viral suppression among women living with HIV in Canada. AIDS Patient Care and STDs, 31(10), 428-437.
  12. Logie, C. H., Lacombe-Duncan, A., Kenny, K. S., Levermore, K., Jones, N., Marshall, A., & Newman, P. A. (2017). Police harassment is associated with HIV vulnerabilities among men who have sex with men and transgender women in Jamaica: A call to action. Health and Human Rights, 19(2), 147-154.
  13. Gutierrez, L., Brady, S., & Gant, L. (2017). Using arts and culture for community development in the US. In G. Craig (Ed.), Community Development, 'Race' and Ethnicity. Policy Press: Bristol, UK.
  14. Hawkins, J., & Mitchell, J. (2017). Social support and integration as mechanisms for better understanding the relationship between race and health care utilization among men. International Journal of Men's Health, 16(1), 66-83.
  15. Pinto, R. M., Witte, S., Filippone, P., Whitman, W., & Baird, K. (2017). Factors that influence linkages to HIV Continuum of Care services: Implications for multi-level interventions. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 14(11), 1355.
  16. Voshel, E. H. (2017). Reflections on an Influential Career. The Field Educator Journal, Volume 7.2. Simmons School of Social Work, Boston, MA.
  17. Greeno, E. J., Fedina, L., & Rushovich, B., Moore, J. E., Linsenmeyer, D., & Wirt, C. (2017). 'They tippy toe around the race issue:’ The impact of a Title IV-E program on cultural competency gains for child welfare students. Child and Family Social Work.
  18. Fedina, L., & DeForge, B. R. (2017). Estimating the trafficked population: Public health research methodologies may be the answer. Journal of Human Trafficking, 3(1), 21-38.
  19. Fedina, L., Lee, J., & de Tablan, D. (2017). MSW graduates’ readiness to respond to intimate partner violence. Journal of Social Work Education.
  20. Shah, R., Von Mach, T., Fedina, L., Link, B., & DeVylder, J. E. (2017). Intimate partner violence and psychotic experiences in four U.S. cities. Schizophrenia Research.
  21. Fedina, L., Backes, B. L., Jun, H. J., Shah, R., Nam, B., Link, B., & DeVylder, J. E. (2017). Police violence among women in four U.S. cities. Preventive Medicine.
  22. Fedina, L., Nam, B., Jun, H., Shah, R., Von Mach, T., Bright, C. L., & DeVylder, J. E. (2017). Moderating effects of resilience on depression, psychological distress, and suicidal ideation associated with interpersonal violence. Journal of Interpersonal Violence.
  23. Ellis, K. R., Janevic, M. R., Kershaw, T., Caldwell, C. H., Janz, N. K., & Northouse, L. (2017). The influence of dyadic symptom distress on threat appraisals and self-efficacy in advanced cancer and caregiving. Supportive Care in Cancer, 25(1), 185-194.
  24. Ellis, K. R., Janevic, M. R., Kershaw, T., Caldwell, C. H., Janz, N. K., & Northouse, L. (2017). Engagement in health-promoting behaviors and patient-caregiver interdependence in advanced cancer: An exploratory study. Journal of Behavioral Medicine, 40(3), 506-519.
  25. Titler, M. G., Visovatti, M., Shuman, C., Ellis, K. R., Dockham, B., Yakusheva, O., & Northouse, L. (2017). Effectiveness of implementing a dyadic psychoeducational intervention for cancer patients and family caregivers. Supportive Care in Cancer, 25(11), 3395-3406.

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