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STIMHR
Faculty Research Awards |
UTSA faculty who are involved in mental-health
research or are planning to pursue this type of research are
annually invited to participate in the summer research awards
program. The primary purpose of this award program is to help
faculty develop competitive grant proposals to advance their
program of research. Three research awards are made each summer.
The awards provide summer salary for one month and one course
release in the fall semester. At the end of the fall semester,
each award recipient is expected to submit a grant proposal
(minimum level of $50,000 a year).
The
Advisory Committee will review applications for the
awards and determine the recipients, with preference to junior
faculty, although associate professors will also be given
consideration. At the
end of the summer, award recipients will submit progress reports
and the Advisory Committee and the Program Director will provide
feedback. At the end of the fall semester, the Advisory
Committee and Director will review the grant proposals and
provide feedback. Recipients will then be expected to submit
their proposals to extramural granting agencies.
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2005 STIMHR Faculty Research Award Recipients |
Michael R. Baumann, Ph.D.
"ACUTE STRESS RESPONSES IN HIGH RELIABILITY
OCCUPATIONS"
Dr.
Michael Baumann joined the UTSA faculty as an Assistant
Professor of Psychology in 2001, the same year he completed his
Ph.D. in Social and Organizational Psychology at the University
of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. His research interests
encompass decision making in groups and teams; performance
(decision making in particular) under acute stress; and affect
and cognition. Dr. Baumann has substantive applied research
experience, having been involved with, among others, the Office
of Naval Research project on training for crisis management and
the Illinois Fire Service Institute, the latter in which he
designed, conducted, and analyzed quasi-experiments to explore
the relationships among training, uncertainty, and anxiety in
acute stress situations. Similarly, he designed and submitted a
grant proposal for studies to address the relationships between
personality and genetics to neurological, immunological, and
psychological responses to acute stress.
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Dr. Baumann's proposed research study melds his primary lines of
inquiry into acute stress and "high-reliability" occupations,
which are those associated with some form of of crisis
management, such as firefighters, police, and emergency medical
personnel. While extant research in this area typically operationalizes the effect of individual differences on stress
in terms of personality, he plans to examine situational,
personality, and genetic influences on stress and stress
responses - a concession toward recent research suggesting the
importance of considering genetic differences in this
context. Dr. Baumann's proposed project is of critical benefit
to the community. Identifying factors that affect firefighters'
reactions to stress is a first step to developing methods aimed
at identifying and selecting applicants who are less likely to
experience stress or are more resistant to the negative effects
of stress on health and performance and will thereby perform
better under acute stress. Likewise, the study is expected to
help cultivate training methods to further enhance performance.
Selecting the best applicants and keeping them healthy longer
through preventative and after-action treatments will increase the overall
effectiveness and efficiency of the fire department. In turn,
this will reduce both the cost to the community in terms of
property damage due to fires and the cost of replacing
firefighters who leave the profession due to mental-health or
physical problems.
Contact Information:
Office Phone: 210.458.5720
E-mail:
mbaumann@utsa.edu
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K. Jill Fleuriet, Ph.D.
"THE PRENATAL PSYCHOSOCIAL ENVIRONMENT AMONG
MEXICAN AND MEXICAN-AMERICAN WOMEN IN SOUTH TEXAS"
Dr.
Jill Fleuriet received her Ph.D. in Anthropology from Stanford
University in 2003 and is currently an Assistant Professor and
Graduate Advisor of Record in the UTSA Department of
Anthropology. Originally trained in biological anthropology with
an emphasis on evolutionary ecology, she became interested in
medical anthropology early in her graduate career. Since joining
UTSA in 2003, Dr. Fleuriet's research has centered on medically
underserved populations along the U.S.-Mexico border and on issues of
women's health and chronic illness. Broadly, she considers
health and illness from a political-economic perspective while
considering effects of transnationalism, biomedical hegemony,
and identity on health and illness among minorities, with
an emphasis on praxis-oriented research. She has conducted
research among the Kumiai and Paipai of northern Baja
California, Mexico, as well as research and consulting among
diverse Latino populations in San Diego, North Carolina, and
South Texas. Dr. Fleuriet grew up in the Lower Rio Grande Valley
of South Texas and later returned to the Valley for her current
research, which considers pregnancy and birth experiences of
immigrant Latinas from Mexico from political, economic, and
feminist perspectives.
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Dr. Fleuriet's proposed research project is a largely qualitative study
that will explore Mexican and Mexican-American women's
psychosocial environment (i.e., acculturation, duration of stay
in the U.S.) during and after pregnancy, including prenatal and
birth experiences as well as knowledge and attitudes toward
prenatal care, pregnancy, motherhood, and gender relations.
Through previous pilot studies, Dr. Fleuriet employed the use of
narrative ethnography, in which she conducted 32 in-depth,
open-ended interviews and two focus groups. Textual data gleaned
through these conversations will be transcribed and analyzed in
order to address the cultural knowledge informing the prenatal
psychosocial environment among Mexican and Mexican-American
women in South Texas. The study will also comprise a survey
component, comprising a battery of self-report psychosocial
measures. Through her research, Dr. Fleuriet hopes to promote
culturally sensitive, mental-health/psychosocial interventions
among medically underserved pregnant Hispanic women in South
Texas, as such interventions have demonstrated improved birth
outcomes among Hispanic and other medically underserved women.
Since Hispanics have some of the lowest utilization and access
rates to health care, and Hispanic children have the lowest rates
of regular health care among minority groups, a culturally
relevant prenatal care program that emphasizes maternal mental
health for medically underserved women could potentially integrate more
Hispanic women and children into existing physical and
mental-health services.
Contact Information:
Office Phone: 210.458.5721
E-mail:
jfleuriet@utsa.edu
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Melinda Morris Villagran, Ph.D.
"COMMUNICATING TO IMPROVE THE MENTAL HEALTH OF
LATINO CANCER PATIENTS IN SOUTH TEXAS"
In
addition to serving as
an Assistant Professor of Communication at UTSA, Dr.
Villagran is an Adjunct Assistant Professor in the
Department of Radiation Oncology at the University of Texas
Heath Science Center in San Antonio. She received her Ph.D. in
Communication from the University of Oklahoma in 2001. Prior to
coming to UTSA, she taught at Texas State University-San Marcos,
the University of Oklahoma, and Oklahoma City University. At the
University of Oklahoma, she was the Academic Coordinator for the
Department of Defense Joint Course in Communication. Dr.
Villagran's research program investigates messages in
organizational and health care interactions. In particular, she
explores the intersections among organizational communication,
health issues, and cognition in order to better understand the
processes affecting patients and health care consumers.
Currently, she is conducting research on communicating about
cancer among cancer patients, health care provider
organizations, family members, and survivors. Having authored or
co-authored of over 25 journal articles, books, and book
chapters, she also continues to pursue her interest in the area
of innovative methods for teaching and researching
communication.
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Dr. Villagran's proposed research study will explore various
cultural factors related to communicating about mental health by
Hispanic cancer patients undergoing radiation treatment. Openly
communicating with others about issues such as fear and anxiety
about death, changes in body image, self esteem, and social
roles, as well as medical bills and interruption of life plans,
has the potential to diminish the perceived isolation of a
cancer patient. To this extent, communication entailing
mental-health issues affecting cancer patients can impact
patient decision-making and quality of life after a cancer
diagnosis. Cultural values that will be examined in this study
include language barriers, fatalism, personalismo, and familiasm,
all of which will be analyzed to assess their impact on, and how
they are impacted by, cancer patients' mental-health concerns as
they undergo radiation therapy treatment for cancer. Anticipated
results will be used to launch a comprehensive approach to
addressing potential threats and opportunities for mental-health
and oncology professionals seeking to reduce the incidence and
severity of depression and other mental-health problems in the
face of cancer involving this especially vulnerable population.
The overall premise for Dr. Villagran's study is inspired by
both the disproportionate burden of cancer among Latinos and the
underlying communication and mental-health issues that may
exist, and, in greater view, the crucial need to address
mental-health issues within the Hispanic population in South
Texas.
Contact Information:
Office Phone: 210.458.7339
E-mail:
melinda.villagran@utsa.edu
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