Session: Racism, race, & systemic trauma (Society for Social Work and Research 28th Annual Conference - Recentering & Democratizing Knowledge: The Next 30 Years of Social Work Science)

All in-person and virtual presentations are in Eastern Standard Time Zone (EST).

SSWR 2024 Poster Gallery: as a registered in-person and virtual attendee, you have access to the virtual Poster Gallery which includes only the posters that elected to present virtually. The rest of the posters are presented in-person in the Poster/Exhibit Hall located in Marquis BR Salon 6, ML 2. The access to the Poster Gallery will be available via the virtual conference platform the week of January 11. You will receive an email with instructions how to access the virtual conference platform.

325 Racism, race, & systemic trauma

Schedule:
Sunday, January 14, 2024: 9:45 AM-11:15 AM
Monument, ML 4 (Marriott Marquis Washington DC)
Cluster:
Moderator:
Shantel Crosby, PhD, University of Louisville
* noted as presenting author
The Moderating Role of in-Person and Online Social Connectedness in the Association between Geographic Isolation and Depressive Symptoms Among Adults Living in the Black Belt Region of Alabama
Luciana Giorgio, PhD, MSW, University of Alabama; Tenesha Littleton, Ph.D., University of Alabama; Karen Johnson, PhD, University of Alabama; David Albright, PhD, University of Alabama; Hee Lee, PhD, MSW, University of Alabama
Multiracial Emerging Adults' Perspectives on Participating in Mental Health Care: A Qualitative Study
Bridget Weller, Ph.D., Western Michigan University; Kiana Jean-Baptiste, MS, Western Michigan University; Dominique Giroux, MA, Western Michigan University
Bridging the Gap: Evaluating a Clinical Treatment Model to Address Racial Trauma
Shantel Crosby, PhD, University of Louisville; Jennifer Middleton, PhD, University of Louisville; Steven Kniffley, PsyD, Spalding University; Kristian Jones, PhD, University of Washington; Angela Caine, MSW, Seven Counties Inc.
Intergenerational Trauma-Related Risk Transmission: Difficulties in Emotion Regulation Are a Mechanism By Which Women's Childhood Maltreatment Creates Risk for High-Risk Eating during Early Pregnancy in Women with High Levels of Prenatal Stress
Sara Stein, PhD, LMSW, University of Michigan-Ann Arbor; Amy Nuttall, Michigan State University; Maria Muzik, MD, University of Michigan; Alytia Levendosky, PhD, LP, Michigan State University; Anne Bogat, Michigan State University; Joseph Lonstein, PhD, Michigan State University; Alison Miller, PhD, University of Michigan-Ann Arbor
See more of: Oral Presentations