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Arnold School of Public Health

Maternal and Child Health Catalyst Program recognizes undergraduate, graduate student winners of iPoster and abstract competitions

May 24, 2021 | Erin Bluvas, [email protected] 

The Arnold School’s Maternal and Child Health (MCH) Catalyst Program partnered with Discover UofSC 2021 to host two MCH-focused contests for participants in the annual university-wide research event. Students planning to submit an abstract and/or iPoster presentation to Discover UofSC were invited to submit their work to the MCH competitions if their research focused on the health and well-being of mothers, infants, children and/or adolescents.

Three undergraduate students and three graduate students were selected as winners of the iPoster presentation contest. These individuals won cash prizes of $150, $100 and $75 for first, second and third place, respectively. 

 

iPoster Presentation Competition

Undergraduate Winners

Award

Student

Title

Mentor

First Place

Samantha A. Johnson

Are First-Time Mothers of ‘Advanced Maternal Age’ Actually ‘High Risk’?: A Systematic Examination of Clinical Research

Emily S. Mann

Second Place

Brooke Wilson

Gestational Weight Gain Not Associated with Arterial Stiffness in Post-Partum Women

Abbi Lane-Cordova

Third Place

William Tucker

Associations of Sodium Consumption and Endothelial Function in Women 6 months – 3 years After Delivery 

Abbi Lane-Cordova

 

Graduate Winners

Award

Student

Title

Mentor

First Place

Agnes G. Bucko

Sleep and physical activity in 6-month-old children

Russell Pate

Second Place

Amanda L. Elmore

Prescription Opioid Use and Use of Medications for Opioid Use Disorder Among Women of Reproductive Age in the United States: NHANES, 2003-2018 

Jihong Liu

Third Place

Maria McClam

SC DHEC Maternal and Child Health Needs Assessment

Lauren Workman

 

Abstract Competition

Three undergraduate students and seven graduate students were selected as winners of the abstract contest. These individuals won cash prizes of $50 each. 

Undergraduate Winners

Student

Title

Mentor

Olivia Cancian

Post-Pregnancy Weight Retention and Endothelial Function 

Abbi Lane-Cordova

William Tucker

Associations of Sodium Consumption and Endothelial Function in Women 6 months – 3 years After Delivery

Abbi Lane-Cordova

Brooke Wilson

Gestational Weight Gain Not Associated with Arterial Stiffness in Post-Partum Women

Abbi Lane-Cordova

 

Graduate Winners

Student

Title

Mentor

Ellie Cooper

The Impact of Childhood Hearing Loss Diagnosis on Maternal Health Literacy and Well-Being 

Krystal Werfel

Amanda L. Elmore

Prescription Opioid Use and Use of Medications for Opioid Use Disorder Among Women of Reproductive Age in the United States: NHANES, 2003-2018

Jihong Liu

Rongjie Huang 

Associations Between Food Insecurity and Pregnancy Outcomes in a Low-Income Population

Stella Self 

Erin Kishman

Sedentary and Physical Activity Time in Women During the First Year Postpartum 

Xuewen Wang

Kaji Tamanna Keya-Korotki

Quality of Maternal Health Care Services in Rural Bangladesh: A Quasi-experimental Study to Measure the Quality of Delivery Care Before and After the Introduction of a Maternal Health Voucher Scheme 

Mahmud Khan

Katie Lynn

Clinical, Molecular, and Epidemiologic Investigations of COVID-19 Transmission in the Peripartum/Postpartum and Perinatal/Postnatal Setting 

Melissa Nolan

Chelsea Richard

Maternal Longstanding Physical Disability and Increased Risk for Small for Gestational Age Infants: Is Prescription Opioid Use on the Causal Pathway? 

Suzanne McDermott

 

The Arnold School’s MCH Catalyst Program was launched in 2020 with a five-year, $450K award from the Health Resources and Services Administration’s parent program. Led by epidemiology professor Jihong Liu, with support from epidemiology clinical associate professor Linda Hazlett, this program works with approximately 40 maternal and child health experts from across the Arnold School to bolster programming and training opportunities in this area.

In the fall semester of 2020, the MCH Catalyst Program announced its inaugural Maternal and Child Health Graduate Scholars. The call for proposals was permanently moved to Spring semester to provide Graduate Scholars with more time (12 months rather than nine) for project completion. In late spring 2021, the program selected another four students as graduate scholars:

An alumna of the Master of Public Health (MPH) in Health Promotion, Education, and Behavior (HPEB) program, Tiffany Byrd is now an HPEB doctoral student. Since graduating with an MPH in 2015, Byrd has worked on the New Morning Foundation‘s Choose Well Initiative, where as senior program manager, she collaborates with other organizations to reduce unintended pregnancies in South Carolina. As an MCH Graduate Scholar, she will examine the effects of COVID-19 on perceived social support among African American women during pregnancy and childbirth in the state.

Tianyue Mi is a Ph.D. in HPEB student who has a background in psychological and cognitive sciences from Peking University. Mi is a graduate assistant for the South Carolina SmartState Center for Healthcare Quality where she constructs models, analyzes statistical data, and develops manuscripts/presentations exploring the pathway from multiple coping mechanisms and physical/mental well-being. For her MCH Graduate Scholar project, Mi will conduct a longitudinal analysis of COVID-19 pandemic and postpartum care using electronic health records.

After studying experimental psychology at UofSC, Carly Moser conducted research in neurodevelopmental disorders full-time before enrolling in the Ph.D. in Communication Sciences and Disorders program. She currently serves as a graduate research assistant in the SC Family Experiences Lab, which aims to understand how communication features associated with autism and fragile X syndrome are shaped by genetic and physiological factors. As an MCH Graduate Scholar, Moser will examine the physiological linkage of mothers and their children with autism spectrum disorder.

Xingpei Zhao is a graduate of the Master of Science in Biostatistics program and a current student in her department’s doctoral program in the field. Working with the Rural and Minority Health Research Center, she builds and manages data systems for use in reducing disparities in infant mortality and adverse pregnancy outcomes for Prisma Health Midlands Heathy Start Program. For her MCH Graduate Scholar project, Zhao will research intimate partner violence and its association with antenatal depressive symptoms among pregnant women served by the Midlands Healthy Start Program.


Related:

Arnold School’s Maternal and Child Health Public Health Catalyst Program selects inaugural Maternal and Child Health Graduate Scholars

Jihong Liu wins grant to advance Arnold School training and curriculum in maternal and child health


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