91ɫƵ

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About the 91ɫƵ Center for Healthy Communities and Research

The Center for Healthy Communities, which was formed in 1997, develops community-academic partnerships that improve health in urban and rural communities in Wisconsin. The Center integrates community-based education for graduate students and undergraduate medical students into these partnerships, and conducts research, both locally and nationally, on community-identified needs. In 2010, the CHC converted to the Center for Healthy Communities and Research (CHCR) combining both the Center and the Research divisions within the Department of Family and Community Medicine.

Staci A. Young, PhD

Staci A. Young, PhD


Professor and Director, Center for Healthy Communities and Research
Department of Family and Community Medicine
91ɫƵ

Staci Young, PhD, professor of family and community medicine, is the director of the Center for Healthy Communities and Research division. Dr. Young earned her bachelor’s degree in economics from Marquette University, and her master’s and doctorate in urban studies from the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. She has over 20 years of experience in community engaged research, evaluation and education.

Dr. Young’s research focus areas include advocacy for vulnerable patients and populations, the organization of work among health professionals in traditional and community-based clinical settings, and the relationship between the urban environment, acute and chronic life stressors, and health status. She has been the Principal Investigator for multiple research projects with longstanding local and statewide partners addressing women’s exposure to violence and harm reduction, the public and community health workforce, and the role of safety net providers in ensuring access to health care. She is the co-investigator for NIH funded grants focused on residential segregation and breast cancer survival among African American and Hispanic women, and weight loss and breast cancer survival among Hispanic women. She was among an inaugural group of 20 scholars nationally selected to participate in the Critical Race Praxis Institute at the University of Maryland. She is also a grant reviewer for the National Science Foundation and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for Injury Prevention and Control.

Dr. Young is deeply committed to teaching and mentoring 91ɫƵ medical students and graduate students. This includes students in the Urban and Community Health Pathway, the Masters in Public Health program, the PhD program in Public and Community Health, and trainees in the academic primary care fellowship. She is also an advisor to the medical student managers of the Saturday Clinic for the Uninsured.

Dr. Young has received numerous awards for her achievements, including the 91ɫƵ Outstanding Medical Student Teacher recognition, the Humanitarian Award from the Milwaukee Academy of Medicine, the Milwaukee Neighborhood Development Innovation award and the 91ɫƵ President’s Diversity and Inclusion Award.

Outside of 91ɫƵ, Dr. Young is the chair of the advisory board for City on a Hill, a faith-based nonprofit organization dedicated to working as a catalyst to bring transformation to individuals, families and neighborhoods in the central city of Milwaukee.

syoung@mcw.edu |

Center for Healthy Communities and Research Faculty and Staff

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Sara Herr, MS

Program Manager

Areas of interest/experience: Program development, process improvement, increasing engagement, and research.

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Katinka Hooyer, PhD, MS

Associate Professor, Family and Community Medicine; Co-Director, Qualitative Consultation Service Core; Secondary Appointments: Center for Bioethics and Medical Humanities, Institute for Health and Equity, BRAVE Program, Wisconsin Institute of Neuroscience

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Kairee Larson

Community Program Coordinator II, Center for Healthy Communities and Research; Core Manager, Qualitative Consultation Service Team

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Linda Meurer, MD, MPH

Professor

Areas of interest/experience: Integration of public and community health into medical education through community engaged scholarship service learning

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David Nelson, PhD

Professor

Areas of interest/experience: Work with communities to develop policies and environmental change to support health as defined by the community.

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Carletta Rhodes, MBA

Education Program Coordinator II

Areas of interest/experience: Research the biological, physical, social, and individual forces that affect the community dynamics in underserved populations in Southeastern Wisconsin.

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Leslie Ruffalo, PhD

Advisor, Family Medicine Learning Community & Family Medicine Student Association; Course Director, Promoting Health in Underserved Communities & Continuous Professional Development; M3 Family Medicine Clerkship: Community Health Instructor

Areas of interest/experience: The use of community engagement strategies to address health disparities. Topics of interest include: nutrition and access to healthy foods, physical activity, substance abuse and behavioral health.

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Kerry Scanlan

Community Program Coordinator II