GCSW at SSWR 2022
January 12, 2022
(WASHINGTON, D.C.) - The following presentations from GCSW faculty, students, and alums have been accepted for the Society for Social Work and Research 26th Annual Conference taking place from January 12–16, 2022 in Washington, DC. This year’s conference theme is “Social Work Science for Racial, Social, and Political Justice.”
PLEASE NOTE: Some presenters may not be attending SSWR 2022 in person in light of the Omicron variant of COVID-19. Presentations marked with # have been withdrawn or shall occur online.
GCSW Presentation Schedule
The following schedule of presentations, workshops, roundtables, and other events by and/or featuring the work of GCSW faculty, students, and researchers is based on the SSWR 2022 online presentation schedule. All sessions will be held at the Marriott Marquis Washington, DC. The names of GCSW faculty, students, and alums are bold.
Thursday, January 13 | Friday, January 14 | Saturday, January 15 | Sunday, January 16 | Special Interest Groups & Panels
Thursday, January 13
Presentation Title | GCSW Affiliated Presenters | Location | Time | Key Takeaway |
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New Frames for Persisting Problems: Racial Disparities, Bias, Poverty, and the Notion of Evidence |
Reiko Boyd, PhD, University of Houston
Alan Dettlaff, PhD, University of Houston |
Supreme Court, ML 4 (Marriott Marquis Washington, DC) | 1:30 PM EST | |
We're Trying to Manage, but Can't Control It: A Grounded Theory Exploration of COVID-19, Racism, and Mental Health Among Middle-Class Black Women |
Quenette Walton, PhD, LCSW, University of Houston
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Monument, ML 4 (Marriott Marquis Washington, DC) | 1:30 PM EST | |
#We Don't Lead with Research; We Lead with Community: Applying Critical Race Theory and Intersectionality to Social Work Research |
Bec Sokha Keo, MSW, University of Houston
Samira Ali, PhD, LMSW, University of Houston
Katie McCormick, LMSW, University of Texas at Austin
Sustain Team, University of Houston |
Independence BR A, ML 4 (Marriott Marquis Washington, DC) | 1:30 PM EST |
The space is designed to facilitate reflection and strategize around application of CRT/I tenants to advance anti-racist SW research and center community priorities.
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Marketing a Maternal and Infant Mortality Prevention Program in the Age of COVID-19: Lessons Learned from UH Healthy Start |
McClain Sampson, PhD, University of Houston
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Monument, ML 4 (Marriott Marquis Washington, DC)
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1:30 PM EST |
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Threat and Deprivation As Distinct Predictors of Posttraumatic Stress and Depression Symptoms in First and Second Generation Latinx Youth |
Liberty Ballroom O, ML 4 (Marriott Marquis Washington, DC)
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3:15 PM EST | ||
Predictors of Mental Health Service Utilization Among Latino High School Students and the Moderating Role of School Location |
Natalia Giraldo-Santiago, MSW, University of Houston
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Liberty Ballroom O, ML 4 (Marriott Marquis Washington, DC)
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3:15 PM EST | |
E-Poster Presentations | ||||
Presentation Title | GCSW Affiliated Presenters | Location | Key Takeaway | |
Client Violence: Building Workplace Safety for Promoting Social Workers' Well-Being |
Monit Cheung, PhD, University of Houston
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Marquis BR Salon 6, ML 2 (Marriott Marquis Washington, DC) |
Friday, January 14
Presentation Title | GCSW Affiliated Presenters | Location | Time | Key Takeaway |
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Social Networks Among Young Adults Transitioning from Foster Care to Adulthood |
Sarah Narendorf, PhD, University of Houston
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Supreme Court, ML 4 (Marriott Marquis Washington, DC) | 8:00 AM EST |
Young adults define their social networks in different ways; networks are shaped by foster care experiences and current living situation
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Mental Health Recovery after Hurricane Harvey |
Holly Davies, MSW, University of Houston
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Liberty Ballroom K, ML 4 (Marriott Marquis Washington, DC)
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8:00 AM EST |
Six factors are significantly associated with mental health status after Harvey. Four predict mental health deterioration, and two predict mental health resilience.
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Tell Me What You Want, What You Really, Really Want: Engaging Children and Adolescents in Planning Sex Education |
Monit Cheung, PhD, University of Houston
Yu-Ju Huang, MSW, University of Houston
Holly Davies, MSW, University of Houston |
Marquis BR Salon 12, ML 2 (Marriott Marquis Washington, DC) |
9:45 AM EST |
Dissonance exists between where teens say they want to get sex education and where they get sex education.
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Motivation in Learning More about Sex Education: Direct Input from Secondary School Youth |
Monit Cheung, PhD, University of Houston
Yu-Ju Huang, MSW, University of Houston
Holly Davies, MSW, University of Houston |
Marquis BR Salon 12, ML 2 (Marriott Marquis Washington, DC)
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9:45 AM EST |
Adolescents in Hong Kong tend to obtain sexual health knowledge from teachers and classmates. The internet and textbooks are two primary preferred autodidactic sources. There was a high motivation that these students would like to acquire sex education motivation in their school years. A youth-friendly self-assessment tool would serve as a channel to express their needs to receive formal sex education. Culturally and gender-sensitive instructions are crucial teaching tools to increase the effectiveness of sexual health education to evoke students’ learning interest and motivation to learn from formal sources. Training should include selecting topics of interest to students to foster a healthy and holistic learning environment.
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Timing of Sex Education: Hearing the Opinions from Elementary School Students |
Monit Cheung, PhD, Professor, University of Houston
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Marquis BR Salon 12, ML 2 (Marriott Marquis Washington, DC)
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9:45 AM EST |
Timing of implementation and open attitude to health promotion are important considerations in designing sex education programs for preteens. Since girls turn to teachers and mothers for information while boys turn to internet sources, this study supports delivering an age-appropriate sex education curriculum starting earlier than the fifth grade, probably from the first grade on a topic of gender differences as suggested by sex educators. Teachers and parents may plan sexual health content with technology-assisted teaching methods. The psychology of the targeted youth’s keen learning desire is projected through their high response rate to each survey question. The unique aspect is that the respondents did not view early timing as a fixed starting point, but rather a continuum learning journey to understand more about sexuality and sexual health. With a curriculum designed to focus on the youth’s desire to learn, primary school students would be able to gradually increase their knowledge based on their developmental needs. Hearing directly from the preteens is an important planning step toward building a user-friendly learning platform.
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Adolescent Preferences for Sexual Education Expressed By Hong Kong Teens |
Holly Davies, MSW, University of Houston
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Marquis BR Salon 12, ML 2 (Marriott Marquis Washington, DC)
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9:45 AM EST |
This study exposed large differences between sex education mores and behavior of teenagers. Before developing a comprehensive grade-by-grade sexual education programs in Hong Kong, educators must work with adolescents to hear about their source preferences: peer support, online sexual education, and age-appropriate education in schools. Given the large disparity between the role adolescents believe the family members should play in sexual education and sex education provided by family members, future research should evaluate which specific areas of family engagement would best engage adolescents in the sex education process. Future curricula can be designed with these preferences in mind. Finally, given the rise of STDs among youth, public health initiatives, including sex-appropriate education in schools, must consider the gendered preferences of the adolescents. Engaging youth in sex education planning according to their preferences can increase the participation and fulfill UNESCO’s goals in providing sexual education to world youth to increase their knowledge about sexual development and behaviors, enrich emotional content, and endorse risk reduction.
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Chinese Mental Health Help-Seeking |
Robin Gearing, PhD, University of Houston
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Mint, ML 4 (Marriott Marquis Washington, DC)
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2:00 PM EST |
In China, fewer than 10% of individuals with mental health problems seek out professional treatment. Findings indicate that beliefs about seeking professional help for mental health are influenced by knowing someone with a mental health problem. In addition, males who were older, had a child, and were married endorsed more openness to help-seeking for mental health needs, underscoring the importance of life experience as an important variable when considering attitudes toward help-seeking. Findings support future research identifying the mechanisms by which these life experiences impact individuals’ help-seeking attitudes.
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Social Well-Being during Cancer Survivorship: A Cross-Sectional Examination of Self-Reported Positive and Negative Effects of the Illness in the Context of Close Relationships |
Chiara Acquati, PhD, MSW, University of Houston
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Liberty Ballroom O, ML 4 (Marriott Marquis Washington, DC)
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3:45 PM EST | |
Psychological Distress and Perceived Change in Self-Reported Quality of Life during Cancer Survivorship: Exploring Sociodemographic, Clinical, and Relational Factors |
Chiara Acquati, PhD, MSW, University of Houston
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Liberty Ballroom O, ML 4 (Marriott Marquis Washington, DC)
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3:45 PM EST | |
Model of Care for Postpartum Depression: A Randomized Controlled Pilot Study of a Brief Home Visitation Program Compared to Psychiatry Referral |
McClain Sampson, PhD, University of Houston
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Liberty Ballroom J, ML 4 (Marriott Marquis Washington, DC)
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3:45 PM EST | |
Promote Smart Decarceration and Eliminate Racism Grand Challenges for Social Work: A Call for Marijuana Policy Reform |
Charles Lea, PhD, University of Houston
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Marquis BR Salon 9, ML 2 (Marriott Marquis Washington, DC)
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5:30 PM EST | |
Trafficked, Tortured, Raped: A Qualitative Investigation of Police Brutality Against Children in Street Situations in Bangladesh |
Nicole Bromfield, PhD, University of Houston
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Monument, ML 4 (Marriott Marquis Washington, DC)
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5:30 PM EST |
The findings suggest that all (n=32) child participants were subjected to extreme abuse by law enforcement. Findings indicate that police officers were both active and passive abusers of children. As active abusers, police intentionally harmed, abused, raped, trafficked, or tortured children under the pretext of maintaining law and order or to “clean” public places by removing children. Most egregiously, boy informants reported being kicked, jailed, slapped or beaten with batons by police. Girl informants reported being forced to have sex or to participate in transactional sexual acts, imprisoned, or expelled from public places by police. Girl respondents also said that police patronized pimps to confine them, as victims of sex trafficking, for repeated sexual abuse by police.
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Professional Stakeholders' Perceptions of Causes of Child Marriage in Lebanon Among Syrian Refugees: An Interpretive Description Study |
Nicole Bromfield, PhD, University of Houston | Monument, ML 4 (Marriott Marquis Washington, DC) | 5:30 PM EST |
Participants identified four significant themes as causes of child marriage: 1) the financial burden of girls; 2) issues around girls’ safety, security, and protecting honor; 3) religious traditions; and 4) lack of awareness of consequences of child marriage. As researchers, we found that the interventions currently being used by the participant stakeholders were not aligned with many of the identified causes of child marriage. Notably, none of the research participants used or suggested using interventions that related to meaningful enforcement of current laws, religious community leaders’ control over marriages and divorce in Syrian communities, racism and discrimination against refugees, the ongoing misogynist harassment of women and girls, nor the abject poverty within the Syrian refugee community.
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E-Poster Presentations | ||||
Presentation Title | GCSW Affiliated Presenters | Location | Key Takeaway | |
Resilience, ADL, and Cognitive Functioning Among Male Older Adults in Poverty in Rural Long-Term Care Facilities in China |
Ying Ma, PhD, MSW, University of Houston
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Marquis BR Salon 6, ML 2 (Marriott Marquis Washington, DC)
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1. Resilience was not identified to be significantly in older respondents without ADL disability (BI=100). 2. Resilience was the second strongest significant predictor for cognitive function (B=0.095, p< .001) in older respondents with ADL disability (BI<100), accounting for an additional 3.4% of variance in cognitive function (ΔR2=0.034, p< .001). | |
Suicide-Related Stigma Among Latinx Individuals in the Southwest United States |
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Marquis BR Salon 6, ML 2 (Marriott Marquis Washington, DC)
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Identifying early warning signs of self-harm and suicide intentions is an effective way to prevent completed suicides, yet few participants explicitly acknowledged the thoughts of self-harm present in the vignette. Unexpectedly, our results did not indicate any significant differences in stigma based on the vignette subject demographics, indicating that stigma towards a person with suicidal ideation may not be affected by the gender or age of the person experiencing suicidal thoughts. Immigrant generation, however, played an important role in our respondents’ perception of individuals experiencing suicidal ideation. Consistent with prior literature, first generation immigrants reported higher levels of community-level stigma toward the vignette subject than those from subsequent generations, indicating those who are second generation immigrants and beyond may be more highly acculturated and thus may report overall lower levels of mental health stigma. This was not the case for personal-level stigma wherein second and third generation immigrants expressed less willingness to accept those experiencing suicidal ideation.
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Transitioning from Homelessness to Housing in Rapid Rehousing: Perspectives of Young Adults |
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Marquis BR Salon 6, ML 2 (Marriott Marquis Washington, DC)
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Saturday, January 15
Presentation Title | GCSW Affiliated Presenters | Location | Time | Key Takeaway |
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The Process of Academic Success Among Black Girls and Women: A Retrospective Constructivist Grounded Theory Study |
Sandra Kalu, LMSW, University of Houston
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Mint, ML 4 (Marriott Marquis Washington, DC)
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9:45 AM EST | |
#Experiencing Civic Engagement after Natural Disasters |
Suzanne Pritzker, PhD, University of Houston |
Archives, ML 4 (Marriott Marquis Washington, DC)
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9:45 AM EST |
Findings demonstrate that disasters may create a window of opportunity for increased civic involvement and in some cases, can more deeply connect people with their communities. Findings also highlight challenges to civic engagement. Inadequate and confusing coordination of disaster assistance and volunteers, limited access (including language access) to reliable information, feelings of abandonment by public officials, and distrust due to inadequate and inequitable systems of recovery suggest needed policy responses to support equitable post-disaster community well-being.
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Sandwich Generation Caregivers: Baby Boomer and Generation X Caregivers in the United Statess |
Christina E. Miyawaki, PhD, University of Houston |
Marquis BR Salon 8, ML 2 (Marriott Marquis Washington, DC)
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9:45 AM EST | |
Receipt of Social Support and Mental Health in Older Vietnamese Immigrants: Results from the Vietnamese Aging and Care Survey (VACS) |
Christina E. Miyawaki, PhD, University of Houston |
Independence BR G, ML 4 (Marriott Marquis Washington, DC)
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4:00 PM EST | |
Traumatic Brain Injury and Psychopathic Features Among Juvenile Offenders: New Evidence on Their Clinical Relevance |
Lindamarie Olson, LMSW, University of Houston |
Archives, ML 4 (Marriott Marquis Washington, DC)
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4:00 PM EST |
Study results show the strong, positive association between TBI and psychopathy, and elucidate the need for more research, clinical practice, and policy work examining this relationship and its potential effects further. Clinical implications suggest early intervention is needed to treat the potential long-term effects of TBIs and the development of psychopathic traits.
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Sunday, January 16
Presentation Title | GCSW Affiliated Presenters | Location | Time | Key Takeaway |
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Applying a Healing Centered Framework with Middle Class Black Women Navigating COVID-19 |
Liberty Ballroom N, ML 4 (Marriott Marquis Washington, DC)
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8:00 AM EST | ||
Economic Justice: Factors Associated with Length of Employment Among Public Family and Protective Service Workers |
Marquis BR Salon 8, ML 2 (Marriott Marquis Washington, DC)
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8:00 AM EST | ||
"Moving on up"... or Not: Financial Hardships Among Participants in a Healthy Relationships Program |
Marquis BR Salon 7, ML 2 (Marriott Marquis Washington, DC)
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9:45 AM EST | ||
Adult and Student Perspectives on School-Based Racial and Ethnic Equity-Informed School-Based Strategies |
Marquis BR Salon 13, ML 2 (Marriott Marquis Washington, DC)
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9:45 AM EST | ||
E-Poster Presentation | ||||
Presentation Title | GCSW Affiliated Presenters | Location | Key Takeaway | |
Transitioning Qualitative Research during a Pandemic: A Feasibility Study |
Chinyere Eigege, MA, MSW,University of Houston |
Marquis BR Salon 6, ML 2 (Marriott Marquis Washington, DC)
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The Impact of COVID-19 on 21st Century Community Learning Centers (CCLC) Programming |
Lindamarie Olson, LMSW, University of Houston
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Marquis BR Salon 10, ML 2 (Marriott Marquis Washington, DC)
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Students reported significantly better outcomes in family, friends, school, and afterschool outcomes in fall 2019 prior to the COVID-19 pandemic. More research on how COVID-19 impacts afterschool programs is needed to determine implications for future programming.
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Special Interest Groups and Panels
Title | GCSW Affiliated Presenters | Date | Location | Time |
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Grand Challenge to Promote Smart Decarceration (PSD) |
Charles Lea, PhD, University of Houston |
Friday, January 14, 2022
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Liberty Ballroom J, ML 4 (Marriott Marquis Washington, DC)
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12:30 PM EST |
#Invited Journal Editors' Workshop: Forum on Publishing Qualitative Research |
Susan Robbins, PhD, University of Houston |
Friday, January 14, 2022
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Marriott Marquis Washington, DC
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3:45 PM |
Reimagining Justice for Youth and Young Adults (RJYYA) |
Charles Lea, PhD, University of Houston
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Saturday, January 15, 2022 | Marquis BR Salon 12, ML 2 (Marriott Marquis Washington, DC) | 7:00 AM EST |
Youth and Young Adult Homelessness |
Sarah Narendorf, PhD, University of Houston |
Saturday, January 15, 2022 |
Liberty Ballroom O, ML 4 (Marriott Marquis Washington, DC)
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12:00 PM EST |
Maternal and Infant Mental Health |
McClain Sampson, PhD, University of Houston |
Saturday, January 15, 2022 |
Independence BR F, ML 4 (Marriott Marquis Washington, DC)
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12:30 PM EST |