
June 2025 Publications, Presentations, Awards, and Other News
Publications
Gregory Alexander and Maxim Topaz were among the authors of “Understanding Gender-Specific Daily Care Preferences: Topic Modeling Study,” published in Journal of Medical Internet Research.
Melissa Beauchemin, PhD ’19, was among the authors of “Navigating B-ALL in the Era of Blinatumomab,” published in American Society of Clinical Oncology Educational Book.
Maeve Brin, Claudia Michaels, and Rebecca Schnall, PhD ’09, were among the authors of “Acceptability and Perceived Usefulness of the CHAMPS Intervention for Improving Medication Adherence Among People with HIV in Alabama and New York,” published in International Journal of Medical Informatics.
Maeve Brin and Rebecca Schnall, PhD ’09, were among the authors of “Validating the Information Technology (IT) Implementation Framework to Implement mHealth Technology for Consumers: A Case Study of the Sense2Quit App for Smoking Cessation,” published in International Journal of Medical Informatics.
Billy Caceres, Jacquelyn Taylor, and Tonda Hughes were among the authors of “Examining the Associations of Family-Related Factors with Hypertension in Sexual Minority Women,” published in LGBT Health.
Christina Congdon, Donald Boyd, PhD '17, and Gregory Alexander were the authors of “Contributing Factors and Associated Outcomes in Burnout Among Certified Registered Nurse Anesthetists: An Integrative Review,” published in AANA (American Association of Nurse Anesthetists) Journal.
Ruth Masterson Creber was among the authors of “Association Between Myocardial Infarction and Quality of Life in the ISCHEMIA Trial,” published in JACC (Journal of the American College of Cardiology) Cardiovascular Intervention.
Brittany Daniel, DNP ’24, Jianfang Liu, Jean-Marie Bruzzese, and Kasey Jackman, PhD '17, were among the authors of “Disordered Eating in Early Adolescence: Disparities Among Minoritised Youth,” published in Journal of Advanced Nursing.
Fabiana Dos Santos and Rebecca Schnall, PhD ’09, were among the authors of “Evaluating the Usability of a Mobile Health Technology to Enhance Medication Adherence in People with HIV,” published in Studies in Health Technology and Informatics.
Madison Horton and Lusine Poghosyan were among the authors of “Advanced Practice Nurses in Primary Care and Their Impact on Health Service Utilisation, Costs, and Access Globally: A Scoping Review,” published in Journal of Clinical Nursing.
Tonda Hughes was among the authors of “‘Moderation Is the Holy Grail’: The Acceptability of ‘Sober Curious’ Tools for Alcohol Reduction Among Midlife Women,” published in Drug and Alcohol Review, and “Reducing Heavy Drinking Through the ‘Sober Curious’ Movement in Australia: Protocol for a Mixed-Methods Study,” published in JMIR Research Protocols.
Ismael Ibrahim Hulchafo, Sarah Harkins, Maxim Topaz, and Veronica Barcelona were among the authors of “Stigmatizing and Positive Language in Birth Clinical Notes Associated with Race and Ethnicity,” published in JAMA Network Open.
Kasey Jackman, PhD '17, was a co-author of “Pediatric Medical Traumatic Stress: What Psychiatric Nurses Need to Know,” published in Journal of Child and Adolescent Psychiatric Nursing.
Rachel Lee and Sarah Rossetti, PhD '09, were among the authors of “Generative AI Demonstrated Difficulty Reasoning on Nursing Flowsheet Data,” published in AMIA (American Medical Informatics Association) Symposium Proceedings.
Phoenix Matthews was among the authors of “Neighborhood Violence, Hair Cortisol, and Perceived Stress Among Black Men Living in a Large Urban City,” published in Psychoneuroendocrinology.
Stephanie Niño de Rivera and Ruth Masterson Creber were among the authors of “Integrating Community-Based Participatory Research into Cardiac Clinical Trials: Lessons from REVASCHOICE,” published in JACC (Journal of the American College of Cardiology) Advances.
Stephanie Niño de Rivera, Yihong Zhao, Sarah Eslami, Natalie Benda, Meghan Reading Turchioe, PhD '18, and Ruth Masterson Creber were among the authors of “Integrating Public Preferences to Overcome Racial Disparities in Research Findings from a US Survey on Enhancing Trust in Research Data-Sharing Practices,” published in JAMIA (Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association) Open.
Rebecca Owens was among the authors of “A Mindfulness-Based Intervention: Effects on Psychiatric Nurses Well-Being and Burnout,” published in Journal of the American Psychiatric Nurses Association.
Lusine Poghosyan, Maura Dougherty, Kyle Featherston, and Monica O’Reilly Jacob were among the authors of “Dementia Care Management in Primary Care Practices: A Descriptive Study Among Nurse Practitioners,” published in BMC Primary Care.
Stephanie Potts-Thompson, Laura Prescott, and Jacquelyn Taylor were among the authors of “Neighborhood Deprivation, Trauma Profiles, Coping, and Stress Prospectively Predict Depressive Symptoms Among Young African American Mothers in the InterGEN Study: A Latent Class Analysis,” published in Journal of Racial and Ethnic Health Disparities.
Sarah Rossetti, PhD '09, was among the authors of “Clinician Perceptions of Generative Artificial Intelligence Tools and Clinical Workflows: Potential Uses, Motivations for Adoption, and Sentiments on Impact” and “Toward Identifying New Risk Aversions and Subsequent Limitations and Biases When Making De-Identified Structured Data Sets Openly Available in a Post-LLM World,” published in AMIA (American Medical Informatics Association) Annual Symposium Proceedings.
Sarah Rossetti, PhD '09, and Haomiao Jia were among the authors of “EHR Documentation Frequency Changes Across the COVID-19 Pandemic” and “Influence of the CONCERN Early Warning System on Unanticipated ICU Transfers, In-Hospital Mortality, and Length of Stay: Results from a Multi-Site Pragmatic Randomized Controlled Clinical Trial,” published in AMIA (American Medical Informatics Association) Annual Symposium Proceedings.
Jingjing Shang, Ashley Chastain, U Gayani E Perera, and Patricia Stone were among the authors of “Policies for Infection Prevention and Control in Home Health Care, 2019 vs 2023,” published in JAMA Network Open.
Jacquelyn Taylor was among the authors of “Changes in DNA Methylation Associated with Psychobehavioral Interventions: A Scoping Literature Review,” published in Biological Research for Nursing.
Maxim Topaz was among the authors of “Cancers Missed, Women Dismissed Yet Persist: Natural Language Processing of Online Forums,” published in Breast Cancer Research; “Comparing the Influence of Social Risk Factors on Machine Learning Model Performance Across Racial and Ethnic Groups in Home Healthcare,” published in Nursing Outlook; and “Nonlinear Relationship Between Vital Signs and Hospitalization/Emergency Department Visits Among Older Home Healthcare Patients and Critical Vital Sign Cutoff for Adverse Outcomes: Application of Generalized Additive Model,” published in Clinical Nursing Research.
Yihong Zhao, Billy Caceres, Morgan Morrison, Laura Prescott, Stephanie Potts-Thompson, Erica Matute-Arcos, and Jacquelyn Taylor were among the authors of “Discrimination, Coping, and DNAm Accelerated Aging Among African American Mothers of the InterGEN Study,” published in Epigenomes.
Yihong Zhao and Jean-Marie Bruzzese were among the authors of “The Association of Mental Health, Asthma Control, and Acute Care Visits Among Rural Adolescents with Poorly Controlled Asthma,” published in Journal of School Nursing.
Yihong Zhao was among the authors of “Examining Measurement Discrepancies in Adolescent Screen Media Activity with Insights from the ABCD Study,” published in Npj Mental Health Research.
Presentations
Gregory Alexander presented “Outcomes of an International Summit on the Use of Information Technology in Care of Older People” at the 35th Medical Informatics Europe Conference, May 19-21, 2025, in Glasgow, Scotland; “From Tools to Teammates: Robots in Health Care” at the Center for eHealth and the Department of Intelligent Mechatronics, University of Agder, on May 26, 2025, in Kristiansand, Norway; “Navigating the Health Information Technology (HIT) Landscape: Strategies for Long-Term Care (LTC) Success” at the Center for eHealth, Department of Intelligent Mechatronics, University of Agder, on June 2, 2025, in Grimstad, Norway; and “Empowerment and Efficiency: The Role of Technology in Long-Term Care for Older Adults” at the 30th International Council of Nurses Congress, “Nursing Power to Change the World,” held June 9-13, 2025, in Helsinki, Finland.
Suzanne Bakken presented “Synergizing AI and Nursing Science” at the National Institute of Nursing Research AI Bootcamp, held virtually on June 2, 2025.
Tonda Hughes presented “Barriers and Facilitators to Helping Sexual Minority Women to Reduce Alcohol-Related Harms: Findings from a New Zealand Community Survey” at the 50th Annual Symposium of the Kettil Bruun Society for Social and Epidemiological Research on Alcohol, held June 9-13, 2025, in Glasgow, Scotland.
Kathleen Mullen presented “AI in Nursing Education” at the New Jersey State Nurses Association Region 6 Annual Meeting, “Artificial Intelligence (AI) in Nursing: From Education to Practice,” held on June 3, 2025, in Forked River, New Jersey.
Rebecca Schnall, PhD '19, presented the poster “Evaluating the Usability of a Mobile Health Technology to Enhance Medication Adherence in People with HIV” at the 35th Medical Informatics Europe Conference, held May 19–21, 2025, in Glasgow, Scotland.
Meghan Reading Turchioe, PhD '18, presented “Use of ChatGPT in PhD Nursing Coursework at Columbia University School of Nursing” at the OpenAI Faculty Roundtable on AI in Education on June 2, 2025, in New York City.
Awards
Tonda Hughes received the Kettil Bruun Society Award for the Advancement of International Research Collaboration from the Kettil Bruun Society for Social and Epidemiological Research on Alcohol on June 12, 2025, in Glasgow, Scotland.
Jacquelyn Taylor received a 2025 Faculty Service Award from the Office of the Provost of Columbia University on May 16, 2025.
Other News
Gregory Alexander was named a Fellow of the New York Academy of Medicine and will be inducted on December 1, 2025. He was also named a Fellow of the Gerontological Society of America and will be recognized at the society’s annual scientific meeting in November 2025.
Leon Chen has been named a Fellow of the American Academy of Nursing, and will be inducted into the academy on October 18, 2025.