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CCPH Consultants From time to time, CCPH appoints Consultants who work with us on specific projects and programs. Information about our current Consultants appears below. For information about CCPH staff, click here. For information about CCPH board members, click here.
Suzanne Cashman, Senior Consultant
Working with CCPH, Dr. Cashman has co-edited
the Curriculum Planning Guide entitled, Advancing the Healthy People 2010
Objectives Through Community-Based Education; taught in the introductory service-learning institute;
and played a leadership role in developing a New England Regional CCPH
Network. In her role as CCPH Senior Consultant, Dr. Cashman advises
CCPH on health promotion and disease prevention issues and serves as a
resource to the Healthy People Curriculum
Task Force and the Paul Ambrose
Health Promotion Student Leadership Symposium. Finally, Dr. Cashman
provided technical assistance to CCPH’s Health Disparities
Service-Learning Collaborative awardees. Kara Connors, Senior Consultant Kara Connors, MPH is the former associate director of CCPH and has an extensive background in coordinating and designing competency-based faculty development training seminars for medicine, nursing, pharmacy, dentistry and allied health professionals across the country. While at CCPH, she coordinated the Health Professions Schools in Service to the Nation Program, a national demonstration program of service-learning in the health professions. Kara has widely published in the field of community-based health professions education, service-learning and faculty development and serves as a facilitator for national audiences in this area. Kara is also is an education consultant at Children's Hospital, Boston where she is directing the instructional design elements of a health promotion distance-learning program for maternal and child health educators. Kara edited CCPH's publications Advancing the Healthy People 2010 Objectives Through Community-Based Education: A Curriculum Planning Guide and A Toolkit for Faculty, Students and Community Leadership Committed to Achieving the Nation's Health Objectives Through Community-Campus Partnerships. Elaine Drew, Senior Consultant Elaine Drew, PhD is an Assistant Professor at the Medical College of Wisconsin, Department of Population Health, Division of Health and Society. As an applied medical anthropologist, her research orientation draws from participatory action research, anthropological holism, and the ecological model of health behavior to examine how individual, social, and structural factors shape health and illness. Her current teaching activities include instructing a foundations course for first year students in the PhD program in Public and Community Health and directing the Health Policy course for second year medical students. Elaine's research activities focus on health inequities and include community-academic partnership projects on diabetes prevention and management among Latino communities in southeast Wisconsin, obesity and diabetes prevention among Alaska Natives in southwest Alaska, and a collaborative study that examines ethics review processes among a diverse national network of CBPR reviewers. Since 2005, Elaine has been a Department of Health and Human Services, National Center on Minority Health and Health Disparities (NCMHD) Scholar. She received her PhD in anthropology from the University of Kentucky. Elmer Freeman, Senior Consultant
Mr. Freeman is the Executive Director of the Center for Community Health Education Research and Service (CCHERS, pronounced "cheers"). CCHERS is a partnership to promote reform in health professions education, between Boston University School of Medicine, Northeastern University Bouve College of Health Sciences, Boston Medical Center, the Boston Public Health Commission and fifteen community health centers in the City. Established in 1991, CCHERS is a highly successful, nationally recognized model of community-based primary care education for medical, nursing, pharmacy and other health professions students through a network of "academic community health centers" engaged in a variety of health services and practice-based research designed to address the unique problems of urban underserved populations. The CCHERS partnership is the founder and oversees the Health Careers Academy (HCa), a public charter high school that provides pathways for urban and minority students to enter the health professions. Prior to his position at CCHERS, Mr. Freeman served as the Executive Director/CEO of the Whittier Street Health Center for seventeen years. During his tenure the Center experienced tremendous growth, became federally funded and opened two satellite facilities. Mr. Freeman has also been the Assistant Director of the Mattapan Community Health Center and a Planner/Analyst at the Health Planning Council for Greater Boston, giving him a strong background in health care planning and administration. Mr. Freeman is an Adjunct Professor at Northeastern University Bouve College of Health Sciences School of Nursing where he teaches courses in health policy, community health, planning and administration. He also consults to a variety of health and human service agencies locally and nationally. Mr. Freeman also serves on a number of boards and participates in a variety of organizations, including Community-Campus Partnerships for Health (past board chair), Massachusetts Health Policy Forum (founding member), South Africa Health Task Force, and Boston Medical Center. He has also been the recipient of a number of honors and awards. Mr. Freeman received his bachelor's degree in Health Services Administration from Northeastern University and his master's degree in Social Work from Boston College. He is currently a doctoral candidate in the Law, Policy and Society Program at Northeastern University. Sherril B. Gelmon, Senior Consultant
Sherril has worked extensively with CCPH, having directed the evaluation for the Health Professions Schools in Service to the Nation (HPSISN) program, the national demonstration of service-learning in the health professions that led to the organization's founding. She has co-authored several CCPH publications, including the final evaluation report for the HPSISN program and "Methods and Strategies for Assessing Service-Learning in the Health Professions." As a CCPH senior consultant, she currently serves as the national evaluator for the Community Engaged Scholarship for Health Collaborative coordinated by CCPH with funding from the Fund Improvement of Postsecondary Education in the US Department of Education. She is also a member of the CCPH consultancy network. Sherril has built much of her scholarship on work related to the scholarship of teaching and the scholarship of engagement. She was one of the first faculty tenured and promoted to full professor at Portland State University under the new guidelines which embrace a broad vision of scholarship. As a result, she has become increasingly interested in how faculty shape their scholarship with respect to community engagement, and has been studying, writing and presenting on this topic since 2001. She presents frequently and is widely published on multiple topics related to evaluation, assessment, accreditation, and community health improvement. In 2005 she was presented with the Distinguished Researcher award by the International Service-Learning Research Conference, as well as being awarded the Oregon Masters of Public Health Faculty Award for Excellence in Teaching. Sherril is an alumna of the Pew Health Policy Fellows Program,
and received her doctorate in health policy from the School of Public
Health at the University of Michigan, her masters in health
administration from the Faculty of Medicine at the University of
Toronto, and undergraduate degrees in physical therapy from the
Universities of Toronto and Saskatchewan. She is a Fellow of the
American College of Healthcare Executives. Piper K. McGinley, Senior Consultant Piper K. McGinley, MA is the former associate director of CCPH and currently serves as a senior consultant for CCPH. Piper directed the CCPH headquarters housed at UCSF Center for the Health Professions, and was responsible for the content and planning of CCPH's annual conference, the introductory and advanced service-learning institutes, and served as lead staff on numerous other projects, including several California-focused initiatives. In addition, Piper produced the bi-annual CCPH magazine, Partnership Perspectives. After CCPH relocated its operations to the University of Washington, Piper served as the Associate Director of the Integrated Nurse Leadership Program (INLP), housed at UCSF Center for the Health Professions. INLP is a Betty and Gordon Moore Foundation program that brings together nurses and hospital executives from the San Francisco Bay Area to learn skills in leadership and management and to implement quality and safety initiatives in their hospitals. In addition to her role as a senior consultant for CCPH, Piper is currently the Associate Director for California Campus Compact. Piper holds an undergraduate degree in Peace and Conflict Resolution from UC Berkeley, and a Master of Arts degree in International Peace and Conflict Resolution from The American University. Nancy Shore, Senior Consultant
In 2003 Nancy worked with CCPH on a NIH funded project to identify the infrastructure required to support and sustain community-university partnerships. She returned to CCPH in 2007 as a senior consultant, working primarily on projects related to community-based research and ethical considerations. Nancy received both her MSW and MPH at the University of
Washington, with a focus on Maternal and Child Health. After four years
working at Neighborhood House Head Start, she returned to the
University to complete her doctoral degree in Social Welfare.
Prior to working at the Carlson Center, Rachel worked full time as a Program Director with Community-Campus Partnerships for Health. In this role, Rachel coordinated the CCPH Consultancy Network, the CCPH Fellows Program, Partners in Caring and Community: Service-Learning in Nursing Education, and other CCPH capacity building activities involving campuses and communities. Rachel received her Bachelor of Science degree in
Environmental Education from Huxley College of Environmental Studies at
Western Washington University. While at Western, Rachel began her
career in the field of service-learning by developing and implementing
three campus based service programs. Rachel earned her Masters of
Social Work degree at the University of Washington, and spent some time
as an academic advisor for the Program on the Environment at UW. Amanda Vogel, Senior Consultant Amanda L. Vogel, PhD, MHS is a Senior Consultant with CCPH and a Behavioral Scientist with SAIC-Frederick, Inc., where she provides support to the National Cancer Institute, Behavioral Research Program. In her current research, Amanda uses mixed methods approaches and community-based participatory research (CBPR) principles to evaluate federal grants that support community-engaged and interdisciplinary teaching, research, and translational initiatives.Amanda received her doctoral degree from the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health (JHSPH), where her dissertation research consisted of a study of the ten-year outcomes of the Health Professions Schools in Service to the Nation (HPSISN) program. The study assessed the extent to which HPSISN schools had sustained service-learning ten years after grant funding ended; highlighted key factors that influence the long-term sustainability of service-learning; and identified practical strategies that academic institutions and funders can use to enhance the sustainability of service-learning. Amanda has published on this work in collaboration with CCPH Executive Director Sarena Seifer and CCPH Senior Consultant Sherril Gelmon. While a doctoral student, Amanda led a student-driven collaboration among students, faculty, and staff to develop a certificate program in Community-Based Public Health at JHSPH that includes a service-learning capstone in the local community. The certificate is now a popular offering among students. She maintains an interest in fostering new community-engaged training opportunities in health professions schools. Amanda received her doctoral degree in Health Policy and Management from JHSPH, her master’s degree in Health and Social Behavior from the Harvard School of Public Health, and her bachelor’s degrees in Sociology and English Literature from Swarthmore College.
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