Aka M. Cameron Hay-Rollins

Aka M. Cameron Hay-Rollins

M. Cameron Hay

(aka M. Cameron Hay-Rollins)

prepared July 20, 2015

1

Associate Professor Associate Research Anthropologist

Global Health Studies Coordinator UCLA Center for Culture and Health

Department of Anthropology Semel Institute for Neuroscience & Human Behavior

124D Upham Hall 760 Westwood Plaza, Box 62

Miami University Los Angeles, CA 90024-1759

Oxford, OH 45056

513-529-9242

1

Education

1988 B.A. with honors in Anthropology.

Thesis: Identity construction for tourism across five ethnic communities in Iowa

Grinnell College. Grinnell, Iowa.

1992M.A. in Anthropology.

Emory University. Atlanta, Georgia.

1998Ph.D. in Anthropology.

Dissertation: Remembering to Live: Coping with Health Concerns on Lombok

Emory University. Atlanta, Georgia.

2004-2005Mentorship in Psychoneuroimmunology.

Cousins Center for Psychoneuroimmunology.

University of California, Los Angeles, California.

Professional Experience

2002-2005Assistant Adjunct Professor in Residence and Assistant Research Anthropologist.

Center for Culture and Health, Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior, Department of Psychiatry, David Geffen School of Medicine, University of California, Los Angeles, California.

2005-2010Assistant Professor

Department of Anthropology. Miami University. Oxford, Ohio

2005-2010Assistant Research Anthropologist (Step IV, 2008).

Center for Culture and Health, Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior, David Geffen School of Medicine, University of California, Los Angeles, California.

2010-Associate Professor

Department of Anthropology. Miami University. Oxford, Ohio.

Year Long Professor, Miami University Luxembourg. Differdange, Luxembourg (2010-2011)

Fellow, Miami Institute for Leadership Development (2011-2012)

Faculty Associate, Center for Human Development, Learning, and Technology (CHDLT) (2012- )

Global Health Studies Coordinator (2013-)

University Marshall (2013- )

CHDLT Board member (2014-2015)

Research Fellow, Scripps Gerontology Center (2014-)

Global Health Research Innovation Center Director (2015-)

2010 - Associate Research Anthropologist (Step II, 2013).

Center for Culture and Health, Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior, David Geffen School of Medicine, University of California, Los Angeles, California.

Areas of Specialization

Social dimensions of health and health disparities; global health; ethnographic, partnership and mixed methods research; doctor-patient communication;autoimmune and chronic disease;maternal and infant mortality; coping and well-being; Indonesia and the United States.

External Fellowships, Awards, and Grants -- Funded

1984-1988 ACM Tuition Remission Fellowship.

Associated Colleges of the Midwest, in conjunction with Grinnell College.

1992Southeast Asian Studies Summer Institute Stipend Fellowship.

University of Washington. Seattle, WA.

1992Language Training Grant

Department of Anthropology. Emory University.

1992FLAS grant winner.

Cornell University. Ithaca, NY.

1993 Merit Award.

Association for Women in Science.

1993 Southeast Asian Studies Summer Institute Tuition Fellowship.

University of Washington. Seattle, WA.

1993-1994 Small Grant for Isolated Scholars.

Southeast Asian Council in conjunction with the Luce Foundation.

1994-1995 National Science Foundation Dissertation Improvement Grant.

Emory University.

2002-2006National Science Foundation Advance Fellows Award. (Total $415,000)

PI: Hay

Internet, Health Experience, and Clinical Interactions Study

Center for Culture and Health, UCLA.

2004-2007National Multiple Sclerosis Society Pilot Award (Total $44,000)

PI: Hay

MS, the Internet, and Clinical Interactions Study

Center for Culture and Health, UCLA (2004-5). Miami University (2005-7).

2006-2008The Local Knowledge/Evidence Framing Study, funded by Pfizer Corp. (Total $240,000)

Senior Investigator: Hay, Co-PI: Weisner, PI's: Naihua Duan & Richard Kravitz

Center for Culture and Health, UCLA.

2008Lawren Daltroy Fellowship for Patient-Clinician Communication, American College of Rheumatology (Total $7000)

PI: Hay

“How Long does Empathy Take?”

Miami University (July 1, 2008-June 30, 2009).

2013Lemelson-Society for Psychological Anthropology Conference Award (Total $20,000)

PI: Hay

“Methods that Matter: Anthropological and Mixed Methods to Inform Real World Policies and Expend Collective Knowledge.

Miami University (May 29, 2013-May 28, 2014)

2014-2015CCHMC Division of Emergency Medicine Pilot Award: “The Effects of Cultural Assumptions and Behaviors on PED Provider-Patient Communication and Patient Health Outcomes (Total $10,000)

Co-PIs: Vaughn, Ruddy, Hay-Rollins, Raval

Cincinnati Children’s Hospital and Medical Center (January 2015-June. 2015)

2015-2017U.S. State Department: Indo-U.S. 21st Century Knowledge Initiative Award: “A training model for culturally competent and evidence-based mental health care for diverse societies” (Total $190,000)

PI: Raval

Consultant: Hay-Rollins
Christ University, Karnataka India (July 2015-July 2017)

Internal Grants, Fellowships, and Awards

1987Rosenfield Summer Research Grant.

Grinnell College. Grinnell, IA.

1988Ralph A. Luebben Anthropology Prize.

Grinnell College. Grinnell, IA.

1990Mellon Foundation Pilot Research Grant.

Emory University

1989-92 Graduate Student Tuition and Stipend Fellowship.

Department of Anthropology Emory University.

1996Post-field Graduate Tuition and Stipend Fellowship.

Department of Anthropology, Emory University.

1997-98Tuition Scholarship.

Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Emory University.

2005Small grant award. ($460)

Center for the Enhancement of Learning and Teaching

College of Arts and Sciences. Miami University.

2005Summer research award. ($4000)

College of Arts and Sciences. Miami University.

2006Small grant award. ($230)

Center for the Enhancement of Learning and Teaching

College of Arts and Sciences. Miami University.

2006-07Course Development Collaborative Award ($3750)

Committee to Enhance Teaching Effectiveness

College of Arts and Sciences. Miami University.

2007 Visiting Scholar award ($500)

Center for the Enhancement of Learning and Teaching

College of Arts and Sciences. Miami University.

2008 PREP grant for publication reprints ($500)

Office for the Advancement of Research and Scholarship

Miami University.

2009 Parents Council Award ($1500)

Funding for the Student Health Study

Miami University

2010 Summer Research Funds ($4000)

Funding for Dolibois European Center Base and Mini-Study Course preparations

Miami University

2011-2012Howe Writing Center Grant ($5000)

PI: L. Peterson, Working Group Member: Hay

Funding for large format foundation course writing assignment development in the major, with Drs. Peterson, Cinnamon, Bielo, M. Peterson. Howe Writing Center, Miami University.

2010-2013 Center for Excellence in Teaching and Undergraduate Assessment ($3000)

Funding for curriculum and network development for the Global Health Initiative at Miami University. CELTUA, Miami University

2012Technology in the Anthropology Laboratories ($28,000)

Co-written with Dr. L. Peterson for funding equipment purchases to enhance student learning in the three departmental laboratories. College of Arts and Sciences, Miami University.

2012 -2013 Center for Human Development, Learning and Technology ($1000)

Funding for pilot work with Drs. Sellers, Harris, and Raval to develop a methodology to study well-being in families with children with sickle cell disease.

2013College of Arts and Science Dean’s Scholar Mentor ($750)

Funding for mentoring Amber Herald’s senior thesis project to examine the illness experiences of children who have had strokes in middle childhood.

2013-2015Department of Psychology Pilot funds ($10,000)

Funding for pilot work with Drs. Harris (PI), Raval, and Sellers to gather mixed methods data on mental health and wellbeing among pediatric Sickle Cell Disease patients in collaboration with Dayton Children’s Hospital.

2013-2014Miami University Humanities Center ($2,500)

Funding to invite anthropologist and film-maker, Robert Lemelson, to campus in February 2014 to present his work and lead discussions with students. Humanities Center in conjunction with Altman Scholars, Miami University

2015-2016Office for the Advancement of Research Interdisciplinary Pilot Grant: PRIMED for Action: Partnership Research in Infant Mortalities and Disparities Harnessing the Experience of African American Mothers, Community Agencies, and Academics to Create Positive Change (Total $30,000)

PI: Hay-Rollins

Co-PIs: Flaspohler, AE Armstrong, Jennifer Bailer, King

Miami University

2015-17Provost’s Interdisciplinary and Innovation Fund: Global Health Interdisciplinary Research Innovation Center: GH@MiamiOH ($120,000)

Funding for a research center to foster faculty research collaborations with colleagues within and beyond Miami University to explore innovative ideas for addressing global health problems both domestic and international.

PI: Hay-Rollins

Co-I: Bailey-van Kuren, Bailer, Crowder, Dutton, Flaspohler, Kunkel, Levy, Mullinex, Pennock, Raval, Smith, Ward

Miami University, Oxford (July 2015-June 2018)

Books

  1. Hay, M. Cameron. Remembering to Live: Illness at the Intersection of Anxiety and Knowledge in Rural Indonesia. 2001 (2004 paperback). University of Michigan Press.
  1. Hay, M. Cameron, ed. Methods that Matter: Integrating Mixed Methods for More Effective Social Science Research. In press. University of Chicago Press.

Research Articles – Peer Reviewed

  1. Hay, M. Cameron. “Dying Mothers: Maternal Mortality in Rural Indonesia.” Medical Anthropology. 1999. 18(3): 243279.
  1. Hay, M. Cameron. “Reading Sensations: A Cross-Cultural Examination of the Process of Distinguishing ‘Fine’ from ‘Sick’.” Transcultural Psychiatry. 2008. 45(2):198-229.
  1. Hay, MC, Cadigan RJ, Khanna D, Strathman CM, Altman R, McMahon M, Kokab M, Lieber E, Furst DE. “Prepared Patients: The Internet and New Rheumatology Patients.” Arthritis Care and Research. 2008. 59(4): 575-582.
  1. Strathmann, Cynthia and M. Cameron Hay. “I’m paying your salary here!: Social Inequality, Consumerism, and the Politics of Space in Medical Clinics.” Human Organization. 2008. 67(1): 49-60.
  1. Hay, MC, Strathmann C, Lieber E, Wick K, Giesser B. “Why patients go online: Multiple Sclerosis, the Internet, and Physician-Patient Communication.” Neurologist. 2008. 14(6):374-381.
  1. Hay, M. Cameron, Thomas S. Weisner, Naihua Duan, Saskia Subramanian, Edward Nedenski, and Richard Kravitz. “Harnessing Experience: Exploring the gap between Evidence Based Medicine and Clinical Practice.” Journal of Evaluation of Clinical Experience. 2008. 14(5):707-13.
  1. Kravitz, Richard, Ed Nedenski, Naihua Duan, M. Cameron Hay, Saskia Subramanian, and Thomas S. Weisner. “Whatever happened to N-of-1 trials.” Milbank Quarterly. 2008. 86(4): 533-555.
  1. Hay, M. Cameron. “Anxiety, Remembering, and Agency: Biocultural Insights for Understanding Illness.” Ethos. 2009. 37(1):1-31.
  1. Strathmann, Cynthia and M. Cameron Hay. “Working the Waiting Room: Managing Fear, Hope, and Rage at the Clinic Gate.” Medical Anthropology. 2009. 28(3): 212-234.
  1. Kravitz, Richard, Debora A. Paterniti, M. Cameron Hay, Saskia Subramanian, Dionne Evans Dean, Thomas S. Weisner, Sunita Vohra, and Naihua Duan. “Marketing Therapeutic Precision: Facilitators and Barriers to Adoption of N-of-1 Trials.” Contemporary Clinical Trials.2009. 30(5): 436-445.
  1. Hay, M. Cameron.“Chronic Illness, Visibility, and Everyday Suffering in a Productive World.” American Ethnologist. 2010. 37(2): 259-274.
  1. Agrawal, Harsh, M. Cameron Hay, Elizabeth R. Volkmann, Paul Maranian, Dinesh Khanna, Daniel E Furst. “Satisfaction and Access to Clinical Care in a Rheumatology Clinic at a Large Urban Medical Center.” Journal of Clinical Rheumatology. 2012. 18(4):209-211.
  1. Weisner, Thomas S. and M. Cameron Hay. “Practice to Research: Integrating Evidence-Based Practices with Culture and Context.” Transcultural Psychiatry. 2015. 52(2): 222-243. Published first online, Nov. 21, 2014.
  1. Ward, Rose Marie and M. Cameron Hay. “Depression, Coping, Hassles, and Body Dissatisfaction: Factors Associated with Disordered Eating. Eating Behaviors. 2015. 17:14-18. Published first online Dec. 2014:
  1. Hay, M. Cameron. “Whiffims and Other Considerations in Building Research Partnerships with Physicians and Patients.” Anthropology News. In press.
  1. Anat Scheiman-Elazary, Cortney Shourt, M. Cameron Hay, Daniel E Furst. “Rateof adherence to medications and associated factorsamongRA patients: SLR and meta-analysis.” Journal of Rheumatology. In press.

Book Chapters

  1. Hay, M. Cameron. “Women Standing Between Life and Death: Fate, Agency, and the Healers of Lombok.” Women’s Agency in Asia. Lyn Parker, ed. 2005. pp. 26-61. Singapore: Cavendish International.
  1. Hay, M. Cameron. “Shame and Making Truth: The Social Repairs of Ethnographic Blunders.” Being There. Melvin Konner and Sarah Davis, eds. 2011. pp. 112-127. Cambridge: Harvard University.
  1. Hay, M. Cameron. “Memory and Medicine.” In The Encultured Brain, D. Lende and G. Downey, eds. 2012. Pp. 141-168. Cambridge: MIT.
  1. Hay, M. Cameron. “Ethnography in Need of Numbers: Mixing Methods to Speak the Local Language, Build Partnerships, and Join Cross-Disciplinary Conversations.” In Methods that Matter, MC Hay, ed. In press. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
  1. Hay, M. Cameron, TS Weisner, SK Subramanian. “What Makes for the Best Clinical Care?: Using Trigger Films to Better Integrate Guidelines and Experience.” In Methods that Matter, MC Hay, ed. In press. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
  1. Hay, M. Cameron. “Maternal Mortality in Indonesia: Anthropological Perspectives on Why Mother Death Defies Simple Solutions.” D.A. Schwartz, ed. Maternal Mortality: Risk Factors, Anthropological Perspectives, Prevalence in Developing Countries and Preventative Stategies for Pregnancy-Related Death. In press. Nova Scientific Publishers.
  1. Hay, M. Cameron. “The Heart of Clinical Relationships: Doctor-Patient Communication in Rheumatology.” P. Nicassio, ed. Psychosocial Aspects of Arthritis: Perspectives on Adjustment and Management. In press. Springer Press.

Encyclopedia Entries

1. Hay, M. Cameron. “Sick Roles”. The Encyclopedia of Disability, Vol. IV. Gary Albrecht, ed. 2006. Pp. 1455-1457. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications.

Book Reviews

  1. Hay, M. Cameron. “C. Laderman's Taming the Winds of Desire (1991).” International Association for the Study of Traditional Asian Medicine Newsletter, 1992. 2(July):17-8.
  1. Hay, M. Cameron. “S. Ferzzaca’s Healing the Modern in a Central Javanese City (2001).” American Ethnologist. 2002. Vol. 29(4):1007-1008.
  1. Hay, M. Cameron. “G. Kroe’s Same Hair Different Hearts, Semai identity in a Malay Context (2002).”Journal of Anthropological Research. 2003. Vol. 59:387-389.
  1. Hay, M. Cameron. “Vieda Skultan’s Empathy and Healing: Essays in Medical and Narrative Anthropology (2007)” Ethos.2009. 37(3), published online.
  1. Hay, M. Cameron. “Devon Hinton and Byron Good’s Culture and Panic Disorder(2009)” Ethos. 2009. 37(4), published online.
  1. Hay, M. Cameron. “Richard Shweder’s The Child (2009), Introduction to the Forum” Ethos. 2011. 39(4), published online.
  1. Hay, M. Cameron. “Richard Shweder’s The Child (2009), Theme: Childhood Challenges” Ethos. 2011. 39(4), published online.
  1. Hay, M. Cameron. “Geri-Ann Galanti’s Caring for Patients from Different Cultures, Fourth Edition (2008).” Medical Anthropology Quarterly. 2014.

Professional Poster Presentations

  1. M.C. Hay, D.E. Furst, C. Strathmann, D. Khanna, P. Clements, R. Altman, M. McMahon, M. Kokhab. “Systemic Sclerosis (SSc) Patients Experience Pain Differently than Rheumatoid Arthritis (RA) Patients.” American College of Rheumatology Annual Meeting, San Diego, CA. 2005.
  2. M.C. Hay, T.S. Weisner, E. Lieber, S. Subramanian, R.L. Kravitz, N. Duan. “Evidence in Clinical Decision Making: Linking Local Endogenous Evidence to Global Exogenous Evidence.” Society for Judgment and Decision Making. Chicago, IL. 2008.
  3. M. Cameron Hay, Elizabeth Embree. “Operationalizing Empathy: A Methodology for Examining Patient-Clinician Relationships.” Society for Medical Anthropology. New Haven, CT. 2009.
  4. M. Cameron Hay. “Building an Undergraduate Program in Global Health.” Global Health Education Consortium and the Consortium of Universities for Global Health Annual Conference. Montreal, CA. 2011.
  5. Anat Scheiman-Elazary, Cortney Shourt, M. Cameron Hay, Daniel E Furst. “A Meta-Analysis and Systematic Literature Review: Effect of the Method used to Measure Adherence in Rheumatoid Arthritis on its Rate and Evaluation of Associated Factors.” American College of Rheumatology Annual Meeting, San Diego, CA. 2013.
  6. Victoria DellaDonna, M. Cameron Hay. “To Go or Not to Go: Medical Decision Making among Emerging Adults.” American Anthropological Association Annual Meeting, Washington, DC. 2014.
  7. M. Cameron Hay, Eileen Anderson-Fye, Rebecca Seligman, Daniel Lende, Nadia El-Shaarawi, and Harold Odden. “Future Directions at the Nexus of Psychological and Medical Anthropology.” Society for Psychological Anthropology Biennial Meeting. Boston, MA. 2015.

Professional Paper Presentations at Conferences

  1. "In Search of Authenticity: Ethnic Tourism in Eastern Iowa." Iowa Academy of Sciences. Des Moines, IA. 1989.
  1. "Tightrope Walker or Dramatis Personae? An Exploration into Balinese Reality." Graduate Student Symposium. Emory University, Atlanta, GA. 1992.
  1. “Personhood, Vulnerability, and Health Care among the Rural Sasak of Lombok, Indonesia.” American Anthropological Association annual meeting. Atlanta, GA. 1994.
  1. “Pomp and Indifference: Exploring Nationalism on Lombok.” Invited paper presented at the Indonesia Studies Conference. Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ. 1997.
  1. “‘They are not Muslims’: Religious Intolerance in Indonesia.” American Anthropological Association annual meeting. Washington, D.C. 1997.
  1. “Poison, Black Magic, and other Hazards of Sex: The Paradox of Male Reproductive Strategies in Lombok, Indonesia.” Male Gender and Health Conference. Emory University, Atlanta, GA. 1998.
  1. “Time to Remember: Motivating Temporal Contexts for Memory among the Sasak of Lombok.” American Anthropological Association annual meeting. Chicago, IL. 1999.
  1. “‘I Am Not Brave Enough’: The Study of Vulnerability in Medical Anthropology.”American Anthropological Association annual meeting. San Francisco, CA. 2000.
  1. “Negotiating Historical Fact: The Politics of Remembering Politics in Rural Indonesia.” Association for Asian Studies annual meeting. San Diego, CA. 2000.
  1. “Hope Springs Eternal: Illusions of Control and Coping with Illness on Lombok.” Presented in an Invited Session at the American Anthropological Association annual meeting. Washington, D.C. 2001.
  1. “Anxiety and Remembering: Keys to Coping with Illness?” Presented at the Society for Psychological Anthropology annual meeting. San Diego, CA. 2003.
  1. “Dead Bones: Medical Authority, Patients, and the Internet.” American Anthropological Association annual meeting. Chicago, IL. 2003.
  1. “Patients, the Internet, and Feeling in Control.” Invited paper presented at the MS Society Researcher’s Conference. Santa Monica, CA. 2005.
  1. “Negotiating Empathy and the Doctor-Patient Relationship.” Society for Psychological Anthropology annual meeting. San Diego, CA. 2005.
  1. “Unseen Presence: The Unseen Presence: Information and the Dynamics of Medical Authority .” Paper co-authored with Dr. R. Jean Cadigan. American Anthropological Association annual meeting. Washington, DC. 2005.
  1. “ ‘I’m paying your salary here!’: Social Inequality, Consumerism, and the Politics of Space in Medical Clinics.” Paper co-authored with Dr. Cynthia Strathmann. American Anthropological Association annual meeting. Washington, DC. 2005.
  1. “Physician-Patient Interactions Across Cultural Distances.” Paper presented at an invited panel at the Russell Sage Foundation. New York City, NY. 2006.
  1. “Suffering Time: The Temporality of Chronic Illness.” American Anthropological Association annual meeting. San Jose, CA. 2006.
  1. “You just have to calm them down: the Emotion Work of Receptionists in Waiting Rooms”. Paper co-authored with Dr. Cynthia Strathmann. American Anthropological Association annual meeting. San Jose, CA. 2006.
  1. “Controlling Health and Illness: A Problem of Agency.” Paper presented as part of a discussion panel on control and agency, which I organized. Society for Psychological Anthropology. Manhattan Beach, CA. 2007.
  1. “The Relativity of Poverty and Health.” Paper presented as part of a discussion panel on poverty and psychological anthropology, organized by Claudia Strauss. Society for Psychological Anthropology. Manhattan Beach, CA. 2007.
  1. “Narrating Sensations: Justifying the Need for Care.” American Anthropological Association annual meeting. Washington, D.C. 2007.
  1. “ A Problem of Translation: Making Evidence-Based Medicine Useful in the Clinic.” Paper co-authored with Dr. Thomas Weisner, who presented the paper. Society for Cross-Cultural Research, New Orleans, LA. 2008.
  1. “The Problem of Helplessness” Society for Medical Anthropology. Memphis, TN. 2008
  1. “The Relevance of Neurology to an Indonesian Healing Tradition.” American Anthropological Association. San Francisco, CA. 2008.
  1. “Working the waiting room: Managing fear, hope, and rage at the clinic gate.” Paper co-authored with Dr. Cynthia Strathmann, who presented the paper. Society for Applied Anthropology, Santa Fe, New Mexico. 2009
  1. “The Making of a Violent Death: Emotions and the Rashoman Effect.” Invited session in honor of Karl Heider and James Peacock. Association for Asian Studies. Chicago. 2009.
  1. “Breaking Down Boxes to Engage Real World Problems: Promoting Student Courage, Collaboration, and Creativity through Transdisciplinarity.” Lilly West Conference on Teaching and Learning. Pomona College. Claremont, CA. 2009.
  1. “Building an Interdisciplinary Bridge for Empathy.” The Encultured Brain Conference. Notre Dame University. South Bend, IN. 2009.
  1. “Betwixt and Between: Everyday Ethics in Healer-Patient Relations Research.” American Anthropological Association. Philadelphia, PA. 2009.
  1. “Evidence Farming, Accommodations to Disability, and Tacit Features of Culture and Sociocultural Context.” Paper co-authored with Dr. Thomas Weisner, who presented the paper. Reconciling Cultural Competence and Evidence-Based Practice in Mental Health Services Conference. University of Michigan. Ann Arbor, MI. 2011.
  1. “Am I really Sick?: How Emerging Adults Interpret Sensations During an Epidemic.” American Anthropological Association. Montreal, Canada. 2011.
  1. “Who Needs Empathy?: Patient Well-Being in Clinical Interactions.” Society for Medical Anthropology & Society for Applied Anthropology. Baltimore, ML. 2012.
  1. “Collapsing Worlds and Empathy Requests: Outcomes of Alignment or Misalignment in Clinical Communications.”Paper presented at the American Anthropological Association. San Francisco, CA. 2012.
  1. “Judging Health in terms of Self: Patterns of Agency among Emerging Adults.” Paper presented at the Society for Psychological Anthropology biennial meetings, San Diego, CA. 2013.
  1. “Clinical Interactions: It’s a Problem of Empathy (or is it?).” Paper presented at the spring symposium of the Center for Human Development, Learning & Technology, Miami University. 2013.
  1. “What Makes for the Best Clinical Care? Negotiating Guidelines and Experience to Develop Treatment Plans.” Co-authored with Tom Weisner. Invited paper presented at the Lemelson-SPA Methods that Matter Conference at Miami University, Oxford, Ohio. 2013.
  1. “Building Partnerships with Physicians.” Paper presented at the American Anthropological Association Annual Meeting. Chicago, IL.2013.

Professional Guest Lectures