Hogben CV 1

Matthew Hogben, PhD

Centers For Disease Control & Prevention

Social and Behavioral Research & Evaluation Branch,

Division of STDPrevention

Mail Stop E-44

Atlanta, GA30333

Office Phone: 404-639-1833 Mobile: 404-788-3514

email:

Summary Statement

I am currently the Chief of the Social & Behavioral Research & Evaluation Branch in the Division of STD Prevention, NCHHSTP. I assumed the role of branch chief in March, 2007, having previously served as a behavioral scientist in the same branch. I have conducted reviews and primary research in two principal areas: (1) improving health provision, behavioral intervention and increasing care-seeking behaviors, and (2) innovative models of partner services for persons infected with STD and HIV.

These two areas mix behavioral and structural intervention techniques, which I have combined with strategic planning at the division and center level and policy research to drive effectiveness and impact – the results of efficacious programs covering a sufficient proportion of the right target populations. My goals are to continue to combine strategic planning with research and evaluation, using an overarching process that draws from program-focused questions to generate research that is then fed back into program operations. Prior to joining CDC in 1999, I completed a doctorate in social psychology at the State University of New York (SUNY) and a post-doctoral fellowship at the Department of Preventive Medicine and Community Health at SUNY Downstate Medical Center.

CV Contents

I.Education/Trainingp. 2

II.Employment Historyp. 2

III.Professional Associationsp. 4

IV.Publicationsp. 5

V.Presentationsp. 15

VI.Editorial/Review activitiesp. 23

VII.Teaching and Developmentp. 24

I. EDUCATION/TRAINING

1999Post-doctoral fellowship (Association of Teachers of Preventive Medicine)

State University of New York Downstate Medical Center, Brooklyn, NY.

1996Ph.D. Social Psychology

University at Albany, State University of New York, Albany, NY

Dissertation: The social cognitive modeling of the psychological construct of legitimized aggression.

1994M.A. Psychology

University at Albany, State University of New York, Albany, NY

Thesis: A report on the frequency and variation by gender of coercive sexual behavior.

1990B.A. Psychology

University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI.

Thesis (High Honors)

II. EMPLOYMENT HISTORY

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, GA. 1999 – present.

2007 – present: GS-15 Branch Chief, Social & Behavioral Research & Evaluation Branch, Division of STD Prevention. (previously named Behavioral Interventions and Research Branch)

Principal duties and selected activities:

  • Supervision: of 15 – 20 (varies across time) staff in two teams of the Social & Behavioral Research & Evaluation Branch, comprising senior scientists, junior scientists, fellows, and interns from multiple social and behavioral science disciplines and public health professions;
  • Formal requirements include preparing performance evaluations, review of scientific and program products for merit, and practicing administrative oversight (approving leave, telecommuting arrangements). Other vital aspects include mentoring staff and encouraging senior staff to mentor junior staff and to exercise leadership in Division-, Center-, and CDC-wide activities.
  • Leadership and Planning:Strategic, scientific and policy consultation and planning with Division and Center leadership, including strategic planning, pan-Center work groups;
  • On leadership committees devising 2007 and 2014Division strategic plans, 2009 Center strategic plan (Health Equity component), 2012 Center youth sexual health review; also yearly Division research and evaluation priorities, 2012 DSTDP research agenda meetings (general and MSM-specific)
  • Set and implement Branch research and evaluation priorities, establish links and complements among research and evaluation activities. These activities are managed primarily through a series of one-page templates that describe the work, its partners, prognosis, and connection to CDC, Center and Division priorities. The templates originate with, and are kept up to date by, the branch staff.
  • Prevention Research:Oversight of or intellectual participation in multi-level behavioral intervention and community prevention activities, involving academic, public health professional, and governmentalpartners;
  • Sexual health initiative (evidence reviews, research agenda, policy documents)
  • Partner services research (expedited partner therapy, evidence reviews, multisite interventions for HIV management)
  • Behavioral and structural contributors to STD morbidity (observational data analyses), including social determinants of health
  • Programmatic Prevention:Development and implementation of programmatic recommendations and guidelines, via policy intervention and direct technical assistance;
  • STD Treatment Guidelines (partner services, including review papers)
  • Integrated program recommendationsfor partner services (includes HIV), technical assistance web repository (i.e., SBIR contract)
  • Community Guide to Preventive Services recommendations for HIV partner services
  • Technical Expertise:Research proposal generation/invited collaboration and manuscript publication, quantitative data analysis, dissemination of public health research and conclusions to public health professionals, scientific review activities;
  • 30+ publications between 2007 and the present
  • Domestic and international technical assistance in partner services research, policy development, and program implementation
  • Represent Division in sexual health definitions, evidence base, policy and research development
  • Consult on program science (generation of research from prevention program questions and problems)
  • Invited collaborator on social determinants of health studiesfor academic grants (Emory/NIH)

2004 – 2007: GS-14 LeadBehavioral Scientist, Behavioral Interventions and Research Branch, Division of STD Prevention.

Principal duties and selected activities:

  • Prevention Research:Leading interdisciplinary teams of public health analysts and social and medical scientists overseeing innovative psychosocial, behavioral, programmatic and epidemiologic interventions to improve sexually transmitted disease partner management services;
  • Coordinated a program announcement with three project officers handling funded projects with independent goals, as well as acted as project officer for two other projects. Each of the funded interventions has produced findings with public health value. Data from two projects aided production of national-level guidance for expedited partner therapy.
  • Leadership and Planning:Leadership of collaborative research and program-relevant working groups, division-level strategic planning;
  • Technical Expertise:Invited to collaborate on behavioral research proposals, in-house and as solicitations for outside applications, research manuscript production, quantitative data analysis, dissemination of public health research and conclusions to public health professionals.
  • 21 peer-reviewed papers published between 2004 and 2007.
  • Pan-Center working group co-chair on integrated recommendations for partner services (MMWR)
  • Collaboration on partner services and health provision grant applications with external governmental and academic partners.
  • Technical and strategic assistance on survey construction.

1999 – 2004: GS-13 Behavioral Scientist, Behavioral Interventions and Research Branch, Division of STD Prevention.

Principal duties and selected activities:

  • Prevention Research:Supervision of and intellectual participation in multi-site behavioral intervention projects, involving academia, public health professionals and CDC/NIMH staff; creation of behavioral research proposals, in-house and as solicitations for outside applications, generally combining social science theory with public health goals to improve public health outcomes.
  • The Gonorrhea Community Action Project (GCAP): a multisite, multi-intervention health provision project. As CDC project officer, I held weekly meetings and biannual group meetings; coordinated, devised, and edited common measures across sites; wrote the overall descriptive paper with logic model; ran quantitative analyses for intervention and collateral outcomes; and wrote technical reviews of project progress. Interventions have been sustained and expanded at some sites. Interventions include manuals and other instruction for programmatic replication.
  • STD CONTACT:a national survey of public and private physicians with respect to their STD diagnosis, screening, and partner management strategies. From this survey, I and colleagues have been able to ascertain gaps in STD screening, private provider opinions about public health partner notification.
  • Technical Expertise:
  • 14 peer-reviewed papers published between 1999 and 2003.
  • Collaboration with Morehouse School of Medicine, which yielded a local survey of sexual history practices and use of CDC guidelines.
  • Production of STD prevention behavioral data for federal regions and individual states.

III. PROFESSIONAL ASSOCIATIONS

American Sexually Transmitted Disease Association (editorial board, Sexually Transmitted Diseases)

International Union against Sexually Transmitted Infections

IV. PUBLICATIONS

Peer-reviewed

1996

1. Hamburger ME, Hogben M, McGowan S, Dawson LJ. Assessing hypergender ideologies: Development and initial validation of a gender-neutral measure of adherence to extreme gender-role beliefs. Journal of Research in Personality, 30, 157-178.

2. Hamburger ME, Lilienfeld SO, Hogben M. Psychopathy, gender, and gender roles: Implications for antisocial and histrionic personality disorders. Journal of Personality Disorders, 10, 41-55.

3. Hogben M, Byrne D, Hamburger ME. Coercive heterosexual sexuality in dating relationships of college students: Implications of differential male-female experiences. Journal of Psychology and Human Sexuality, 8, 69-78.

1997

4. Hogben M, Waterman CK. Are all of your students represented in their textbooks? A content analysis of coverage of diversity issues in introductory psychology textbooks. Teaching of Psychology, 24, 95-100.

1998

5. Hogben M. Factors moderating the effect of televised aggression on viewer behavior. Communications Reports, 25, 220-247.

6. Hogben M, Byrne D. Using social learning theory to explain individual differences in human sexuality. The Journal of Sex Research, 35, 58-71.

1999

7. Hogben M, Wilson TE, Feldman J, Landesman S, DeHovitz J. The influence of HIV-related knowledge and exposure fears on behavior change and incident STDs. Women & Health, 30(2), 25-37.

8. Hogben M, Hartlaub MH, Wisely L. Searching for a common core: An examination of human sexuality textbook references. Teaching of Psychology, 26, 131-134.

2000

9. Hogben M, Waterman CK. Patterns of conflict resolution within relationships as a function of coercive sexual behavior by men and women. Sex Roles: A Journal of Research, 43, 341-357.

10. Hogben M, St. Lawrence JS. HIV/STD risk reduction interventions in prison settings. Journal of Women’s Health and Gender-based Medicine,9, 587-592.

2001

11. Hogben M, Williams SP. Exploring the context of women’s relationship perceptions, sexual behavior, and contraceptive strategies. Journal of Psychology and Human Sexuality, 13(2), 1-20.

12. Hogben M, St. Lawrence JS, Eldridge GD. Sexual risk behavior, drug use, and STD rates among incarcerated women. Women & Health, 34, 63-78.

13. Hogben M, Gange SJ, Watts DH, Robison E, Young M, Richardson J, Cohen M, DeHovitz J. The effect of sexual and physical violence on risky sexual behavior and STD among a cohort of HIV-seropositive women. AIDS & Behavior, 5, 353-361.

14. Hogben M, Byrne D, Hamburger ME, Osland J. Legitimized aggression and sexual coercion: Individual differences in cultural spillover. Aggressive Behavior, 27, 26-43.

2002

15. Hogben M, St. Lawrence JS, Kasprzyk D, Montano D, Counts G, McCree DH, Phillips W, Scharbo-DeHaan M. Sexually transmitted disease screening in the United States by obstetricians and gynecologists. Obstetrics and Gynecology, 100, 801-807.

2003

16. Hogben M, St. Lawrence JS, Hennessy MH, Eldridge GD. Using the Theory of Planned Behavior to understand STD risk behaviors of incarcerated women. Criminal Justice and Behavior, 30, 187-209.

17. McCree DH, Liddon N, Hogben M, St. Lawrence JS. National survey of doctors’ actions following the diagnosis of a bacterial STD. Sexually Transmitted Infections, 79, 254-256.

18. Golden MR, Hogben M, Handsfield HH, St. Lawrence JS, Potterat JJ, Holmes KK. Partner notification for HIV and STD in the United States: Low coverage for gonorrhea, chlamydial infection and HIV. Sexually Transmitted Diseases, 30, 490-496.

19. McCree DH, Leichliter J, HogbenM, St. Lawrence JS. Human Papillomavirus screening by U.S. physicians. Preventive Medicine, 36, 159-163.

20. Kerani RP, Golden MR, Whittington WLH, Handsfield HH, Hogben M, Holmes KK. Spatial bridges for the importation of STD in King County, WA. Sexually Transmitted Diseases, 30, 742-749.

2004

21. Golden MR, Whittington WLH, Handsfield HH, Miller L, Clark A, Malinski C, Helmers JR, Hogben M, Holmes KK. Failure of family planning referral and high interest in advanced provision emergency contraception among women contacted for STD partner notification. Contraception, 69, 241-246.

22. Hogben M, St. Lawrence JS, Montano D, Kasprzyk D, Phillips WR. Physician opinions of three forms of STD partner notification: Responses from a national survey. Sexually Transmitted Infections, 80, 30-34.

23. St. Lawrence JS, Kuo W-H, Hogben M, Montaño DE, Kasprzyk D, Phillips WR. STD care: Variations in clinical care associated with provider sex, patient sex, patients’ self-reported symptoms or high-risk behaviors, and partner STD history. Social Science & Medicine, 59, 1011-1018.

24. Wimberly YH, Hogben M. A portrait of STD care and partner management among Southern physicians. Southern Medical Journal, 97, 624-630.

25. Hogben M, Bloom F, McFarlane M, Malotte CK, Fortenberry JD, St. Lawrence JS, GCAP Study Group. Attendance at STD clinics: A quantitative and qualitative portrait. International Journal of Nursing Studies, 41, 911-920.

26. Malotte CK, Ledsky R, Hogben M, Larro M, Middlestadt SE, St. Lawrence JS, Olthoff G, Settlage RH, VanDevanter NL, GCAP Study Group. Comparison of methods to increase repeat testing in persons treated for gonorrhea or chlamydia at public sexually transmitted disease clinics. Sexually Transmitted Diseases, 31, 637-642.

27. Golden MR, Handsfield HH, Hogben M, Potterat J. HIV partner notification in the United States: A national survey of program coverage. Sexually Transmitted Diseases, 31, 709-712.

2005

28. McCree DH, Oh J, Hogben M. Status of and pharmacists’ role in patient-delivered partner therapy for sexually transmitted diseases. American Journal of Health-Systems Pharmacy, 65, 643-646.

29. Hogben M, Ledsky R, Middlestadt SE, VanDevanter NL, Messeri P, Merzel C, Bleakley A, Sionean CK, St. Lawrence JS. Psychological mediating factors in an intervention to promote adolescent health care-seeking. Psychology, Health & Medicine, 10, 64-77.

30. VanDevanter N, Messeri P, Middlestadt SE, Bleakley A, Merzel C, Hogben M, Ledsky R, Malotte CK, St. Lawrence JS. A community-based approach to increase preventive health care seeking in adolescents: The Gonorrhea Community Action Project. American Journal of Public Health, 95, 331-337.

31. Golden MR, Whittington WLH, Handsfield HH, Hughes JP, Stamm WE, Hogben M, Clark A, Malinski C, Larson J, Thomas KK, Holmes KK. Impact of expedited sex partner treatment on recurrent or persistent gonorrhea or chlamydial infection: A randomized controlled trial. New England Journal of Medicine, 352, 676-685.

32. Hogben M, McCree DH, Golden MR. Patient-delivered partner therapy for sexually transmitted diseases as practiced by U.S. physicians. Sexually Transmitted Diseases, 32, 101-105.

33. Gift TL, Malotte CK, Ledsky R, Hogben M, Middlestadt SE, VanDevanter NL, St. Lawrence JS, GCAP Study Group. A cost-effectiveness analysis of interventions to increase repeat testing in patients treated for gonorrhea or chlamydia at public sexually transmitted disease clinics. Sexually Transmitted Diseases, 32, 542-549.

34. Boily M-C, Godin G, Hogben M, Sherr L, Bastos FI. The impact of the transmission dynamics of the HIV/AIDS epidemic on sexual behaviour: A new hypothesis to explain recent increases in risk-taking behaviour among men who have sex with men. Medical Hypotheses, 65, 215-226.

35. Hogben M, Paffel J, Broussard D, Wolf W, Kenney K, George D, Rubin S, Samoff E. STD partner notification with men who have sex with men: A review and commentary. Sexually Transmitted Diseases, 32(supp), S43-S47.

2006

36. Hogben M, Liddon N, Pierce A, Sawyer M, Papp JR, Black CM, Koumans EH. Incorporating adolescent females’ perceptions of their partners’ attitudes toward condoms into a model of female adolescent condom use. Psychology, Health & Medicine, 11, 449-460.

37. Gift T, Hogben M. STD and HIV screening practices of emergency department physicians compared to physicians in other settings: Results from a national survey. Academic Emergency Medicine, 13, 993-996.

38. Golden MR, Gift TL, Brewer DD, Fleming M, Hogben M, St. Lawrence JS, Thiede H, Handsfield HH. Peer referral for HIV case-finding among men who have sex with men. AIDS, 20, 1961-1968.

39. Wimberly YH, Hogben M, Moore S, Fry Y. Sexual health care offered by Southeastern US physicians. Journal of the National Medical Association, 98, 1924-1929.

40. Hogben M, Burstein G. Expedited partner therapy for adolescents diagnosed with gonorrhea and/or chlamydia: A review and commentary. Adolescent Medicine Clinics, 17, 687-695.

41. Schwartz RM, Malka ES, Augenbraun M, Rubin S, Hogben M, Liddon N, McCormack WM, Wilson TE. Predictors of partner notification for C trachomatis and N gonorrhoeae: An examination of social cognitive and psychological factors. Journal of Urban Health, 83, 1095-1104.

2007

42. Hogben M, McNally T, McPheeters M, Hutchinson A. The effectiveness of HIV partner counseling and referral services in increasing identification of HIV-positive individuals: A systematic review. American Journal of Preventive Medicine, 33(Suppl 2), S89-S100.

43. Hogben M, Wimberly YH, Moore S. Estimating dissemination of Centers for Disease Control and Prevention STD treatment guidelines from a survey of physicians. International Journal of STD & AIDS, 18, 318-320.

44. Hogben M. Partner notification for sexually transmitted diseases. Clinical Infectious Diseases, 44, S160-S174.

45. Hogben M, Burstein G. Partner notification for sexually transmitted infections in the obstetrician and gynecologist office. Contemporary Obstetrics and Gynecology, 52(7), 44-50.

46. Golden MR, Hughes JP, Brewer DD, Holmes KK, Whittington WLM, Hogben M, Malinski C, Golding A, Handsfield HH. Evaluation of a population-based program of expedited partner therapy for gonorrhea and chlamydial infection. Sexually Transmitted Diseases, 34, 598-603.

47. Schillinger JA, Hogben M. A core area approach to public health partner notification for gonorrhea control: Comment on Du et al. Sexually Transmitted Diseases, 34, 195-196.

2008

48. Hogben M, Kissinger P. A review of partner notification for sex partners of men infected with chlamydia. Sexually Transmitted Diseases, 35(suppl.), S34-S39.

49. Hodge JG, Pulver A, Hogben M, Bhattacharya D, Brown EF. Expedited partner therapy for sexually transmitted diseases: Assessing the legal environment. American Journal of Public Health, 98, 238-243.

50. Hogben M, Kachur R. Partner notification over the internet: Another arrow in the quiver. Sexually Transmitted Diseases, 35, 117-118.

51. Martin T, Hogben M, CarltonAL, LiddonNC, Koumans E. Attitudes toward using condoms and condom use: Differences between sexually abused and non-abused African American female adolescents. Behavioral Medicine, 34(2), 35-54.

52. Schwartz RM, Hogben M, Liddon N, Augenbraun M, McCormack WM, Rubin S, Wilson TE. Coping with a diagnosis of C trachomatis or N gonorrhoeae: Psychosocial and behavioral correlates. Journal of Health Psychology, 13, 921-929.

53. Hoffman S, Beckford SL, Kelvin E, Wallace S, Augenbraun M, Hogben M, Liddon N, McCormack W, Rubin S, Wilson TE. West Indian immigrant and US-born Black STI clinic attendees: Comparison of HIV/STI risk behaviors, self-efficacy, attitudes, and intentions for condom use and partner notification of STI. American Journal of Public Health, 98, 2042-2050.

54. Bernstein K, Beiger E, Karpati A, Hogben M. HIV screening among US physicians, 1999 - 2000. AIDS Patient Care & STD, 22, 649-656.

55. Hogben M, Leichliter JS. Social determinants and sexually transmitted disease disparities. Sexually Transmitted Diseases, 35(Suppl.), S13-18.

56. Hogben M, Liddon N. Disinhibition and risk compensation: Scope, definitions, and perspective. Sexually Transmitted Diseases, 35, 1009-1110.