Project Details
Description
The candidate, Virginia A. Rauh, is Assistant Professor of Public Health
at Columbia University School of Public Health, where she is currently
teaching in the area of Maternal & Child Health, and conducting research
focused on reproductive health and developmental processes in minority
populations. Active and proposed research projects are interdisciplinary,
with co-investigators from the departments of Obstetrics & Gynecology,
Child Psychiatry, Epidemiology, and the Institute of Human Nutrition (all
located in the Columbia University Health Sciences complex). Clinical
sites (for recruitment of subjects) include ambulatory care clinics at
Presbyterian Hospital in the City of N.Y. Harlem Hospital Medical Center,
and St. Vincent's Hospital Chinatown Clinic. As part of the 5-year plan,
the candidate will develop and carry out a longitudinal study to identify
and ascertain the effects of psychosocial risk factor for adverse child
developmental outcomes (at birth and through the pre-school period) among
disadvantaged, minority children. The candidate is particularly concerned
with the application of empirical findings to the field of early
intervention. To this end, she aims to develop working relationships with
public health and child developmental policy makers.
Long-term career goals are concerned with the design of early
intervention program that are based on the candidate's observational work
and recent advances in the field. Because intervention research currently
suffers from a number of conceptual and methodologic limitations, the
candidate plans to focus on the solution of some of these problems
(including the development and field-testing of culturally sensitive
measures of risk factors as well as developmental outcome) before
proceeding with the design and evaluation of new intervention programs.
The RCDA would enable DR. Rauh to carry out such a research plan, and
provide her with the time and opportunity to conduct thoughtful analyses
of existing data sets.
In the event of an award, Columbia University will limit the candidate's
teaching load and relieve her of her current responsibilities as chair of
the school-wide Steering Committee. Furthermore, if the candidate enjoys
a successful publication record, the Dean's Office anticipates a
promotion to Associate Professor in the next five years.
Status | Finished |
---|---|
Effective start/end date | 1/1/90 → 1/31/94 |
Funding
- Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development
ASJC Scopus Subject Areas
- Pediatrics, Perinatology, and Child Health
- Psychiatry and Mental health
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