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Date of Preparation of CV 10/13/2019 Personal Data Silvia S. Martins Birthdate: 03/17/1974 Birthplace: Curitiba- PR, Brazil Citizenship: Brazil/Luxembourg/US Permanent Resident since 2009 Academic Appointments/Work Experience 07/2012- Present Department of Epidemiology New York, NY Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University Associate Professor (tenured since May 2018) 02/2009- 06/2012 Department of Mental Health Baltimore, MD Bloomberg School of Public Health, Johns Hopkins University Associate Scientist (research track equivalent to Associate Professor) 05/2007-01/2009 Department of Mental Health Baltimore, MD Bloomberg School of Public Health, Johns Hopkins University Assistant Scientist (research track equivalent to Assistant Professor) 06/2005- 04/2007 Department of Mental Health Baltimore, MD Bloomberg School of Public Health, Johns Hopkins University Research Associate Post Doctoral Training 09/2003-05/2005 Department of Mental Health Baltimore, MD 1

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Date of Preparation of CV

10/13/2019

Personal Data

Silvia S. Martins

Birthdate: 03/17/1974

Birthplace: Curitiba- PR, Brazil

Citizenship: Brazil/Luxembourg/US Permanent Resident since 2009

Academic Appointments/Work Experience

07/2012- Present Department of Epidemiology New York, NY

Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University

Associate Professor (tenured since May 2018)

02/2009- 06/2012 Department of Mental Health Baltimore, MD

Bloomberg School of Public Health, Johns Hopkins University

Associate Scientist (research track equivalent to Associate Professor)

05/2007-01/2009 Department of Mental Health Baltimore, MD

Bloomberg School of Public Health, Johns Hopkins University

Assistant Scientist (research track equivalent to Assistant Professor)

06/2005- 04/2007 Department of Mental Health Baltimore, MD

Bloomberg School of Public Health, Johns Hopkins University

Research Associate

Post Doctoral Training

09/2003-05/2005 Department of Mental Health Baltimore, MD

Bloomberg School of Public Health, Johns Hopkins University

Post-doctoral Fellow- concentration in Drug Dependence Epidemiology

02/1999-01/2001 Department of Psychiatry São Paulo, SP, Brazil

Universidade de São Paulo

Psychiatry Resident

02/1998- 01/1999 Department of Pediatrics Ribeirão Preto, SP, Brazil

Universidade de São Paulo

Pediatrics Resident (1st year only)

Education

02/2001- 08/2003 Universidade de São Paulo,

São Paulo, SP, Brazil

Psychiatry Department & São Paulo State Institute of Psychiatry

PhD, August 2003 Major: Psychiatry

Thesis title: “Jogo Patológico no gênero feminino: características clínicas e de personalidade” (Female Pathological Gambling: Clinical and Personality Features)

Sponsor: Valentim Gentil Filho, Full Professor and Chairman of the Department of Psychiatry, University of São Paulo

03/1992-01/1998 Universidade Federal do Paraná, Medical School Curitiba, PR, Brazil

MD, January 1998 (not licensed in the USA)

Honors and Awards

2018- Awarded tenure at Columbia University

2017- Columbia Mailman’s School of Public Health Dean’s Excellence in Mentoring Award

2016- Senior author on the 2nd best poster at the Day 1 Poster Session Society of Epidemiologic Research Annual Meeting

2016- Nominated by the Department of Epidemiology for the Columbia President’s Teaching Award

2016-Nominated by the Department of Epidemiology for the Irving Institute Mentor of the Year Award

2013- Columbia President’s Global Innovation Fund Award

2012- Senior Author on one of the first three best posters at the World Psychiatric Association- Section on Epidemiology and Public Health -2012 Meeting

2011- American College of Neuropsychopharmacology Travel Awardee

2011- Joseph Ciarrocchi Recognition Award from the Maryland Council on Problem Gambling for pioneering efforts in research on youth problem gambling

2009- Elected Regular Member, The College on Problems of Drug Dependence

2007- NIDA Women and Gender Junior Investigator Travel Award, 2007

2006- American Psychiatric Association Research Colloquium for Junior Investigators Award (2nd time)

2006- Elected Associate Member, The College on Problems of Drug Dependence

2004- American Psychiatric Association Research Colloquium for Junior Investigators Award

2004-2005- Postdoctoral Overseas Research Scholarship, National Council of Research (CNPq- Brazil) CNPq 20.018/2004-0

2001-2003- Pre-Doctoral Research Scholarship, São Paulo Research Council (FAPESP), Brazil

Academic Service

10/2019- Present- Steering Committee Member for Public Health 2035, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University

04/2019- Present, Director, Policy and Health Initiatives for Opioids and other Substances Group (PHIOS)

10/2017- Present- Substance Abuse Unit Leader, Department of Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University

09/2017- 01/2018- Columbia Mailman Interdisciplinary Research Taskforce

09/2017- Present- Epidemiology Department Representative, Schoolwide Steering Committee, Columbia Mailman School of Public Health

10/2016- Present- Representative of the IMSD Program at Columbia University to the Doctoral Steering Committee, Department of Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University

02/2015- Present- Member, Foundation Essay Committee, Department of Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University

02/2015- Present- Representative of the Substance Abuse NIH-NIDA T32 to the Doctoral Steering Committee, Department of Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University

06/2014-02/2015 -Representative of the Doctoral Admissions Committee to the Doctoral Steering Committee, Department of Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University

11/2012-02/2015- Member, Doctoral Admissions Committee, Department of Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University

2010-2011- Departmental Self-study Committee, Department of Mental Health, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health

Professional Organizations and Societies:

Memberships and Positions

Brazilian Medical Council

Brazilian Psychiatric Association

Regular Member - The College on Problems of Drug Dependence

Member - American Public Health Association

Member - American Public Health Association Latino Caucus

American Public Health Association Latino Caucus Scientific Program Co-Chair for the 2006 APHA Annual Meeting

Member- The College on Problems of Drug Dependence Under-represented Minority Committee- 2008-2012

Member- The College on Problems of Drug Dependence Publications Committee- 2012-2014

Member- Board of Directors, Maryland Coalition on Problem Gambling

Member- National Council on Problem Gambling

Regular Member- World Psychiatric Association Epidemiology and Public Health Section

Member- American Psychopathological Association

Member- National Hispanic Science Network

Member and Chair- The College on Problems of Drug Dependence Publications Committee- 2014-2018

June 2018- Present- Member- The College on Problems of Drug Dependence Program Committee

September 2013- Present - Scientific Advisory Board, Responsible Gaming Accreditation Board

September 2010-Present - Adjunct Associate Professor, Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Michigan State University

July 2012- Present - Adjunct Associate Professor, Department of Mental Health, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health

Consultative

01/2013-12/14- Consultant for Purdue Pharma on secondary data analysis on the role of Alcohol Use Disorders on Incident Prescription Opioid dependence

Ad Hoc Review of Proposals

July 2017- June 2021- NIH-NIDA’s (National Institute on Drug Abuse) Community Influences on Health Behavior Study Section – Permanent study section reviewer

Proposal Review (10/2016)- NIH-NIDA’s (National Institute on Drug Abuse) Community Influences on Health Behavior Study Section – Ad hoc reviewer

Proposal Review (12/2015)- National Center for Responsible Gaming Seed Grant Applications

Proposal Review (11/2015)- NIH-NIDA’s (National Institute on Drug Abuse) Special Emphasis Panel Cutting-Edge Basic Research Awards (CEBRA) R21s

Proposal Review (06/2013)- NIH-NIDA’s (National Institute on Drug Abuse) Special Emphasis Panel ZRG1 PSE-P (55) of applications in response to PAR-13-080: Accelerating the Pace of Drug Abuse Research Using Existing Data.

Proposal Review (03/2012)- NIH-NIDA’s (National Institute on Drug Abuse) Internet-Assisted Review (IAR) of NIH/NIDA B/START applications.

Proposal Review (05/2009)- NIH-NIDA’s (National Institute on Drug Abuse) Special Emphasis Panel/Scientific Review Groups for Phase I Review of Challenge Grants ZRG1 PSE-J 58 R & ZRG1 PSE-C 58 R.

Proposal Review (12/2007)- NIH- NIDA’s (National Institute on Drug Abuse) Special Emphasis Panel/Scientific Review Groups 2008/01 ZDA1 MXS-M (13) & 2008/05 ZDA1 MXS-M (05), acted as Chairperson.

Proposal Review (10/2007)- NIH-NCCAM’s (National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine) Special Emphasis Panel ZAT1-JH24

Proposal Review (10/2005)- The Netherlands Organization for Health Research and Development (ZonMw, The Hague).

Editorial

Journal Peer Review Activities

Addiction, Alcoholism: Clinical & Experimental Research, American Journal of Epidemiology, American Journal of Preventive Medicine, American Journal of Psychiatry, American Journal of Public Health, American Journal on Addictions, Annals of Internal Medicine, BMC Public Health, CNS Spectrums, Developmental Science, Drug and Alcohol Dependence, Drug and Alcohol Review, European Child & Adolescent Psychiatry, Expert Opinion on Drug Safety, General Hospital Psychiatry, Health Services Research, Human Psychopharmacology: Clinical and Experimental, International Journal of Epidemiology, International Gambling Studies, JAMA Pediatrics, JAMA Open Network, Journal of Adolescent Health, Journal of Clinical Psychiatry, Journal of Nervous and Mental Diseases, Journal of Psychiatric Research, Journal of Substance, Abuse Treatment, Human Psychopharmacology, Lancet Psychiatry, Neuropsychobiology, Pediatrics, Pharmacoepidemiology and Drug Safety, Population and Development Review, Prevention Science, Preventive Medicine, Psychiatry Research, Psychology of Addictive Behaviors, Psychopharmacology, Regional Anesthesia and Pain Medicine, Revista Brasileira de Psiquiatria (Brazilian Psychiatric Journal), Sexual Health, The American, Journal of Drug and Alcohol Abuse, The Journal of Studies on Alcohol and Drugs, The Journal of Urban Health

Editorial Board Membership

The Open Neuropsychopharmacology Journal -2008- present

The Open Addiction Journal- 2009- 2010

Associate Editor- BMC Public Health- 2009- 2011

Co-Section Editor- ‘Health behaviour, Health promotion and society section’ -BMC Public Health- 2011- Oct 2013

Psychology of Addictive Behaviors- 2014-2018

Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology- 2016-present, Associate Editor since March 2018

Frontiers in Psychiatry- Mood and Anxiety Disorders section- 2016- present

Addictive Behaviors- Jan 2018

Journal of Cannabis Research- Associate Editor since October 2018

Fellowship and Grant Support

Present Support

1R01 DA048572-01 Cerda & Martins (MPI) 01/01/2019-11/30/2023

Examining the synergistic effects of

cannabis and prescription opioid policies on chronic pain, opioid prescribing, and opioid overdose

We need to examine the independent and synergistic contributions that both types of measures have on opioid prescribing practices and opioid overdoses. We propose to pursue this aim in two populations: (1) in the U.S. population, using repeated cross-sectional data of individuals nested in states from the National Survey on Drug Use and Health; and (2) among Medicaid patients with chronic pain (a relevant subpopulation given their 10 times increased risk of opioid use disorder relative to privately insured patients), using a 45-state Medicaid Analytic Extract longitudinal cohort to examine within-patient changes in opioid prescriptions, clinic visits for chronic pain, and opioid overdoses.

Total costs: $3,643,327

Role: Principal Investigator (MPI)

1R01 DA048572-S1 Cerda & Martins (MPI) 01/01/2020-11/30/2021

Examining the synergistic effects of

cannabis and prescription opioid policies on chronic pain, opioid prescribing, and opioid overdose

Building on the parent grant, the Administrative Supplement aims to:

1) Develop a validated taxonomy of opioid policies that will allow researchers to measure variation in key aspects of each policy as well as the overall, cross-policy, restriction of the PO supply and expansion of access to treatment for opioid use disorder. 2) Identify the opioid policy provisions that are the strongest predictors of changes in opioid prescribing and opioid misuse (with/without BZDs).

Total costs: $312,560

Role: Principal Investigator (MPI)

R01 DA048860

Hasin (PI)

07/01/2019 – 06/30/20

Impact of Medical and Recreational Marijuana Laws on Cannabis, Opioids, and Psychiatric Medications of VA Patients, 2000-2024

The goal of this application is to continue to examine the effects of medical marijuana laws (MML) and recreational marijuana laws (RML) on adult use of cannabis, opioids and related outcomes. The application is being submitted to NIDA with Research Foundation for Mental Hygiene (RFMH) serving as the prime awardee. The study will involve analyses of VA data to determine the relationship between the state MML, RML and use of cannabis, opioids and other substances, substance use disorders involving these substances, prescription opioids, psychiatric treatment and other variables potentially affected by these laws.

Total subaward costs: $553,650

Role: Subaward PI

R01 DA048853

Keyes (PI) 06/16/2019-06/30/2024

As adolescent substance abuse declines, internalizing symptoms increase: identifying high-risk substance using groups and the role of social media, parental supervision, and unsupervised time

Internalizing symptoms among adolescents are increasing at an historically unprecedented pace, and are no longer associated with alcohol use, requiring identification of risk factors that may be utilized to identify subgroups that continue to be at risk for prevention and intervention scale-up. Curiously, the prevalence of most alcohol and other drug use, risk factors for adolescent internalizing symptoms, are simultaneously declining in an historically unprecedented way. The present project uses Monitoring the Future data to examine time trends in the relationship between internalizing symptoms (self-esteem, self-derogation, depressive affect, loneliness), alcohol and other drug use, and across subgroups at high risk, using an innovative approach to examine social media use and other potential drivers of adolescent trends in internalizing symptoms and alcohol and other drug use to inform prevention efforts.

Total costs: $1,504,228

Role: Co-Investigator

UM1DA

El-Bassel ((PI) 04/01/2019-03/31/2023 NIH/NIDA

CHASE: An Innovative County-Level Public Health Response to the Opioid Epidemic in New York State

 New York State (NYS) ranks second in the nation in absolute numbers of opioid overdose deaths. From 2015-2016, opioid overdose deaths in NYS increased by 32%, including an 88% increase in synthetic opioid-related deaths. The proposed research will develop and test a County-system Hub and Spoke Empowerment model (“CHASE”) to reduce incidence of fatal overdoses in 15 geographically and racially diverse counties in NYS that averaged 28.2 deaths per 100,000 in 2017. 

Role: Co-Investigator

1R21DA045267-01A1 (Williams)

09/01/18 – 08/31/2020

MEDICAL MARIJUANA PROGRAM PARTICIPATION AND CHANGES IN CONTROLLED SUBSTANCE USE

We propose to partner with the largest medical marijuana provider in New York (> 10,000 participants enrolled as of October 2017). Participant activity is tracked through an electronic health record with de-identified patient characteristics at baseline (demographics, qualifying condition and symptoms, concomitant medications) that is linked to data containing 12-month controlled substance prescription history through the state’s prescription drug monitoring program (PDMP). The analysis of these de-identified, compiled records is a highly innovative and cost-effective method for better understanding the potential mechanisms of how participation in medical marijuana programs influences controlled substance use and overdose risk among patients with pain conditions receiving opioids and sedative-hypnotics and can inform subsequent prospective study designs.

Total subaward costs: $168,444

Role Co-Investigator

1R01 DA042657-01 Davidson & Desmond (MPI)

09/15/2018-04/30/22

Health and Psychosocial Need: The Asenze Study of risk and protection in Adolescence

The goal of this proposal is to investigate the early-life origins of adolescent risk behavior in a disadvantaged population in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa. The study will document cognitive and contextual predictors of drug use and unprotected sex, and investigate the impact of early life adversity and adolescent cognitive development on adoption of these behaviors in the Asenze cohort of adolescents that has been assessed at two time points during their earlier childhood.

Total costs (Year 1): $506,921

Role: Co-Investigator

K01DA045224-01A (PI: Mauro) 07/01/2018 – 06/30/2023

NIH/NIDA Multi-level associations between medical marijuana laws and substance use disorder treatment

In this project, we will use data from the 2004-2014 National Survey on Drug Use and Health (NSDUH) restricted data files to understand relationships between Medical Marijuana Laws (MML) and perceptions of treatment need and use by racial/ethnic groups. Second, we will assess relationships between MMLs and referral sources treatment utilization trends using data from the Treatment Episodes Data Set (TEDS), to determine whether criminal justice referral patterns are differentially changing by MML. Third, we will use data from a cohort of Medicare/Medicaid beneficiaries to determine the effect of MML on service use and costs over time by racial/ethnic group.

Role: Primary Mentor

Mailman Interdisciplinary Pilot Research Award (P50 pilot funds) Martins (PI) 05/01/18—04/30/19

The Columbia Center for the Study on Opioids and Co-Occurring Drug Use (CICOD) Martins (PI) 05/01/18- 04/30/19

The Center, which received pilot funds from the Dean last year, is building a new collaborative structure among faculty and students across Columbia University. The Center will rapidly capture emerging population-level trends, test the effects of substance use and abuse policies and community-level interventions, and actively translate findings from these new collaborations to policymakers and the public in an understandable and timely manner. Further, we have expanded the Center from last year’s proposal to support the development of a new cohort of mothers who used opioids during pregnancy, and their exposed children.

Total costs: $40,000

Role: Principal Investigator

NIDA – INSERM Drug Abuse Research Fellowship Azevedo Silva (PI) 12/01/17-11/30/18

This post-doctoral project will examine the association between the legalization of recreational marijuana use for adults in the USA and changes in marijuana and/or tobacco consumption. A particular emphasis will be put on the impact of this policy change on inequalities in substance use in terms of gender, age, education and socio-economic position.

Total costs: $60,084

Role: Mentor

1R01 DA037866-01-S1 Martins (PI) 09/01/17-08/31/19

State medical marijuana laws and NSDUH marijuana use and consequences since 2004- DIVERSITY SUPPLEMENT

In line with the parent grant, under my mentorship, Dr. Abiola will examine the consequences of a drug-related arrest or marijuana arrests on the likelihood of future drug offending or on key social determinants of health such as educational attainment, employment, and marital status using the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth (NLSY97) (1997-2008) and the NSDUH from 2004 onwards.

Total costs: $196,830

Role: Principal Investigator

K23DA044342

Williams (PI) 09/01/17- 08/31/22

Improving the treatment cascade of MAT initiation and retention for opioid use disorder

The nation faces an epidemic of opioid overdose deaths as a downstream consequence of undertreated opioid use disorder among 2.4 million individuals. Dr. Williams will link clinical data from electronic health records from a large, multi-site buprenorphine provider to insurance claims data to assess factors that promote continuity of care along the opioid use disorder treatment cascade. We hope to empirically evaluate each cascade stage for potential clinical benefits of medication-assisted treatment as long-term maintenance treatment.

Total Costs: $980,896

Role: Co-mentor

Dean’s Pilot Award Initiative

Martins (PI) 07/01/17- 06/30/18

The Columbia Center for Marijuana, Opioid and Drug Use related-harm Studies (CC-MODUS)

The specific aims are to: 1) Create an administrative structure that will utilize expertise and resources across Columbia in order provide leadership, oversight, mentorship, and coordination of CC-MODUS efforts. 2) Leverage resources from the NIDA-funded Substance Abuse Epidemiology T32 to develop innovative and transformative educational programs. 3) Fund much needed research and administrative assistance to develop pilot research projects and NIH grant applications. 4) Develop and submit and NIH P50 Center grant proposal for the September 2018 deadline and compete for other extramural resources that will support high impact drug use and drug use disorder related harm research.

Total costs: $75,000

Role: Principal Investigator

1R25GM62454 Wingood, Martins, Goldsmith and Navas- Acien (MPI) 04/01/17- 11/31/20

IMSD at Columbia’s Mailman School of Public Health

The purpose of this IMSD at Columbia's Mailman School of Public Health is to increase the diversity of students who receive doctoral training in public health and contribute to public health research focusing on those groups that experience disparities in health

Total costs: $1,515,082

Role: Principal Investigator

1R01 DA040811

Daniuilaityte (PI) 07/15/16-04/30/20

A natural history study of BUPRENORPHINE diversion, self-treatment, and engagement with formal treatment services

The overall purpose of this natural history study is to describe and analyze the nature and consequences of diverted buprenorphine use among heroin and/or non-medical pharmaceutical opioid users (NMPU) with DSM-5 opioid use disorder.

Total costs: $2,490,829

Role: Co-Investigator (Columbia subcontract PI)

1R01 DA040924-01A1

Cerda (PI) 07/01/16-06/30/20 

The health and social consequences of national marijuana legalization 

The purpose of the proposed study is to evaluate the impact of Uruguay’s recent national marijuana legalization on adolescent and adult marijuana use and marijuana dependence, as well as consequences of marijuana use.

Total costs: $1,501,961

Role: Co-Investigator (Columbia subcontract PI)

1R01 DA039962-01

Cerdá (PI) 04/15/16-03/31/19

Prescription drug monitoring programs and opioid-related harm

The findings from this study will inform researchers and policymakers about the types of prescription drug monitoring program (PDMP) characteristics that would lead to the greatest reduction in prescription opioid (PO)-related harm, and identify potential unintended consequences of PDMP characteristics.

Total costs: $1,533,675

Role: Co-investigator (Columbia subcontract PI)

1R01 HD060072 Martins, Canino and Duarte (MPIs) 04/01/14-03/31/20

PREDICTORS OF IMPULSIVE BEHAVIOR AMONG YOUTH

This study integrates a developmental model of PG, Blaszczynski and Nower’s Pathways model (so far only examined cross-sectionally) with a context -and intervention-informed developmental model of other risk behaviors (Ecodevelopmental theory). We will collect new information about gambling behaviors and PG on a high-risk population of 1,100 youth/young adults from two population-based samples of Puerto Rican (ages 15-26) from two sites: the South Bronx (SBx), NYC and San Juan, Puerto Rico (PR) by taking advantage of an ongoing study, the Boricua Youth Study. This is a competing continuation of former proposal “Predictors of Pathological Gambling among African-American Young Adults”, Martins (PI).

Total costs: $3,799,293

Role: Principal Investigator

1R01 DA039454

Daniulaityte & Sheth (MPI) 09/01/14-08/31/19

Trending: Social Media Analysis to Monitor Cannabis and Synthetic Cannabinoid Use

The overall purpose of this application is to apply cutting edge information processing techniques to the analysis of social media data for epidemiological monitoring of user knowledge, attitudes, and behaviors related to the use of natural and synthetic cannabis products.

Total costs: $1,740,759

Role: Co-Investigator (Columbia subcontract PI, total subcontract costs: $99,149)

1R01 DA037866-01 Martins (PI) 09/15/14-08/31/19

State medical marijuana laws and NSDUH marijuana use and consequences since 2004

In this project we propose to investigate the relationship between medical marijuana laws with marijuana use and disorder and consequences in both adolescents and adults, using the restricted access data files from the National Survey on Drug Use and Health (NSDUH), 2004-present.

Total costs: $2,065,361 (Direct costs: $1,590,206)

Role: Principal Investigator

1T32 NIDA DA031099 Hasin (PI) 07/01/2012-06/30/2022

EPIDEMIOLOGY OF SUBSTANCE USE DISORDERS TRAINING PROGRAM AT COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY

A training program on substance abuse epidemiology to prepare talented young scientists committed to a career in substance abuse epidemiology to become the next generation of leaders in this field.

Total costs: $1,553,414

Role: Co- Director, and Faculty mentor

Past Support

Pre-Doctoral Research Scholarship, São Paulo Research Council (FAPESP), Brazil

FAPESP 02/02650-8& 00/14215-9from 01/01/00 – 31/08/03

Pathological Gambling in Women: Clinical and Personality features (Ph.D. thesis)

Aims: The goal of this project was to study sociodemographic, clinical and psychiatric comorbidity as well as personality features of males and females who sought treatment at the Pathological Gambling Unit - Institute of Psychiatry -University of São Paulo Medical School, Brazil

Postdoctoral Overseas Research Scholarship, National Council of Research (CNPq- Brazil)

CNPq 20.018/2004-0 from 08/01/04 – 07/31/05

Project: Epidemiology of Ecstasy use: comparison with marijuana users and association with other drug use, abuse and dependence.

Aims: This was a post-doctoral scholarship to conduct a secondary data analysis of the National Household Survey of Drug Use (NHSDA) and analyzes trends in ecstasy use as well as subgroups of ecstasy users

Total costs: $21.120,00

Role: Principal Investigator

Janssen Pharmaceuticals- Chilcoat (PI) 11/01/05 – 6/01/06

An Epidemiologic Investigation of Problems Related to Misuse of Analgesics -.

Aim: To examine the distribution and clustering of symptoms of abuse and dependence due to extramedical use of analgesics.

Total costs: $50,000 (only direct costs, no indirect costs)

Role: Co- Principal Investigator

Incentive grant for Young Investigators Award- Institute for Research on Pathological Gambling

and related disorders, Division on Addictions, Harvard Medical School, Martins (PI) 09/01/04-12/31/2005

Prevalence of gambling disorders, association with drug use & psychiatric comorbidity in adolescents living in Baltimore

Aim: To estimate the prevalence rates of gambling habits & gambling disorders and to investigate the cross-sectional and longitudinal association of gambling disorders with drug use, psychiatric comorbidity, different levels of parent monitoring and deviant peer relationship among adolescents living in Baltimore a sample of 515 17-year-old youth (90% of them are African American) from Baltimore City.

Total costs: $23,000, Direct costs: $20,000, Indirect costs: $3,000

Role: Principal Investigator

GlaxoSmithKline Martins (PI) 05/01/07 – 08/30/07

Understanding clustering of dependence symptoms across drug types

Aim: To examine the distribution and clustering of symptoms of dependence due to use of alcohol, tobacco, marijuana, cocaine, heroin and extramedical use of analgesics using the NSDUH 2002-2005 datasets.

Role: Principal Investigator

Total costs: $50,000- (only direct costs, no indirect costs)

1 Ontario Problem Gambling Research Centre grant Martins (PI) 03/31/07- 03/30/08

Subtyping Gambling behaviors in the Canadian general population

Aims: To identify different gambling subtypes among gamblers in the general population via Latent Class Analysis (LCA) based on regional and demographic and gambling characteristics and behaviors and investigate how these subtypes correlate with CPGI scoring of gambling and specific CPGI scored items, while testing for gender differences across subtypes.

Total costs: $35,927, Direct costs: $31,241, Indirect costs: $4,686

Role: Principal Investigator

1R03 DA020923-01 Martins (PI) 09/30/05 – 06/30/08

National Institute on Drug Abuse

PREDICTORS OF ADOLESCENT ECSTASY USE IN THE NATIONAL SURVEY OF PARENTS AND YOUTH

Aims: 1) Test for changes in ecstasy use and in attitudes and beliefs towards ecstasy use among adolescents over time; 2) test whether previous deviant behaviors, previous high sensation-seeking scores and use and level of use of other drugs predict future ecstasy use among adolescents; 3) test whether previous low levels of parent monitoring and high levels of peer ecstasy use predict future ecstasy use among adolescents.

Total costs: $161,329, Direct costs: $100,000, Indirect costs: 61,329

Role: Principal Investigator

1R01 DA016558-06 Anthony (PI) 09/30/2003-06/30/2012

Cross National Studies of Drug Involvement- WMH 2000

Total costs: $1.698,695

Role: Consultant from July 2009 to June 2011

SENAD (Anti-Drug National Secretariat), Brazil Carlini (PI) 12/15/2008-8/14/2010

Levantamento Nacional sobre o Consumo de Drogas entre Estudantes de Ensino Fundamental e Médio da Rede Pública e Privada – 2008 (National Survey about Drug Use among middle and high school students in public and private schools, 2008).

Aim: To estimate the prevalence of drug use among middle and high school students in public and private schools in the 27 Brazilian state capitals.

Total costs: R$2.000.000,000 Brazilian Reais (US$1.000.059,104)

Role: Consultant

FAPESP (São Paulo State Research Agency), Brazil Noto (PI) 05/01/2008- 06/30/2010

I LEVANTAMENTO SOBRE O USO DE DROGAS ENTRE ESTUDANTES DO ENSINO FUNDAMENTAL E MÉDIO DA REDE PARTICULAR DO MUNICÍPIO DE SÃO PAULO (1st Epidemiologic Survey about Drug Use among middle and high school students in private schools in São Paulo city).

Aim: To estimate the prevalence of drug use among middle and high school students in public and private schools in the city of São Paulo.

Total costs: R$100,000 Brazilian Reais (US$52,934)

Role: Consultant

Seed grant funded by the American University of Beirut, Lebanon

Ghandour (PI) 10/01/09- 09/30/10

Prescription Drug Use among College Students in Lebanon: Prevalence, Patterns, and Correlates of Medical and Non-Medical Use and Diversion

Aims: To examine: (1) the prevalence and pattern of the medical and non-medical use of classes of “controlled” psychoactive prescription drugs; (2) the extent of diversion of these prescription drugs; (3) the current perceived availability; and (4) the associations between the medical and non-medical use of these drugs and several other relevant correlates, including demographics and other youth problem behaviors such as the use of other substances.

Total costs: $7,000

Role: Co-investigator

1 R01 DA020630-01A2 NIDA Alexandre (PI) 05/29/07 – 04/30/11

ECONOMIC ASPECTS OF ECSTASY USE

Aims: to estimate the extent to which ecstasy use contributes to (1) more health services utilization and cost and (2) criminal activities and related costs among adolescents and young adults; and (3) to investigate the relationships between ecstasy use and academic performance among high school students.

Total costs: $922,177

Role: Co-investigator

1 R21 DA020667-01A2 Martins (PI) 05/15/07– 04/30/11

TRENDS IN PROBLEMS RELATED TO EXTRAMEDICAL USE OF ANALGESICS

Aims: to test for 1) changes in characteristics of extramedical analgesic users over time, 2) potential causal pathways between psychiatric disorders and extramedical analgesic use and abuse/dependence, 3) categories of problem extramedical analgesic use based on observed clustering of symptoms of analgesic abuse/dependence and identify factors associated with analgesic abuse/dependence and 4) to estimate the distribution of symptoms of extramedical analgesic abuse/dependence in the U.S. household population.

Total costs: $424,436 Direct costs: $258,875, Indirect costs: $165,561

Role: Principal Investigator

1 R03 DA023434- 01A1

Martins (PI) 09/01/08 – 06/30/12- NCE

TrenDs in Nonmedical prescription Drug use and abuse/dependence among adolescents

Aims: to estimate prevalence of 1) non-medical prescription drug (NMPD) use and 2) abuse and dependence and associations with demographic characteristics, deviant behaviors, sensation-seeking, polydrug use and mental health treatment and to test whether these associations change over time, 2) testing for variation in NMPD use by age and gender subgroups, and 3) explore the prevalence and different patterns of polydrug abuse/dependence among adolescents who meet criteria for NMPD abuse /dependence over time, and test for different covariate associations.

Total costs: $164,000. Direct costs: $100,000, Indirect costs: $64,000

Role: Principal Investigator

CNPQ (National Council of Research), Brazil Nappo-PI 09/01/2010-08/31/2012

Motivos apontados por usuários de crack como desencadeadores de recaída e avaliação de fatores predisponentes do usuário e tratamento que levam a esse quadro (Crack users reasons for relapse and treatment correlates that lead to relapse among this population).

Role: Consultant

1 R01 DA023577- NIDA Carlson (PI) 01/01/2008- 01/31/2013

Opioid Trajectories and HIV Risk among Young Adults in Ohio

Total costs: $3.091,278

Role: Consultant

1 R01 HD060072 Martins (PI) 03/01/09 – 02/28/14- NCE

Predictors of Pathological Gambling Among African-American Young Adults

This study integrated a developmental model of problem gambling (PG), Blaszczynski and Nower’s Pathways model. We collected new information about gambling behaviors, PG, psychiatric and developmental measures on a high-risk population of mostly African American Baltimore youth (ages 15-26) and tested for differences in PG pathways.

Total costs: $884,647, Direct costs: $539,419, Indirect costs: $345,228

Role: Principal Investigator

FAPESP 2011/50517-4(São Paulo State Research Foundation, Brazil) Andrade (PI) 01/01/2012-02/28/2014

Identification of subgroups of alcohol userS and related factors in the São Paulo Metropolitan Area: gender differences, sociodemographic characteristics and psychiatric comorbidities

This research project used latent variable modeling (latent class analysis and item response theory) to identify different subgroups of alcohol users by conducting secondary data analysis of alcohol data from the São Paulo Megacity study.

Total costs: R$46.954,00- Brazilian Reais (US$24.488,59)

Role: Co-Investigator

FAPESP 2012/04614-0 (São Paulo State Research Foundation, Brazil) Carlini (PI) 07/01/2012- 06/30/2014

Alcohol and drug use among middle and high school students in the state of são Paulo (“Levantamento sobre o uso de drogas psicotrópicas entre estudantes do ensino fundamental e médio no Estado de São Paulo”)

The aim of this study is to investigate lifetime, past-year and past-month prevalence of alcohol and drug use and factors associated with substance use in a cross-sectional sample of

15,000 middle and high-school students in the state of São Paulo.

Total costs: R$229,325- Brazilian Reais (US$112,792,60)

Role: Co-Investigator

IRESP (Institut de Recherche en Santé Publique), France Melchior (PI) 28/5/2011-31/12/2014 Trajectoires de santé mentale et de prise en charge pour raisons de santé mentale :de l'enfance à l'âge adulte (Trajectories of mental health and mental health care access: from childhood to adulthood using EDEN and TEMPO cohort studies (France), the ELDEQ (Canada), and NESARC (United States).

The aims of this study are to improve understanding of long-term mental health trajectories with a particular emphasis on the ways in which social and economic factors may shape risk as well as access to adequate mental health treatment.

Role: Consultant

CNPQ (Brazilian Council of Research) 472991/2012-4 Sanchez (PI) 12/2012- 12/2014

DRUG USE PREVENTION IN BRAZILIAN SCHOOLS: INVESTIGATING FACTORS ASSOCIATED WITH PREVENTION PROGRAM EXECUTION (Prevenção ao uso de drogas nas escolas brasileiras: diagnóstico da situação atual e fatores associados à implantação de programas”)

This project aims to identify school-related factors for the future implementation of drug use prevention programs.

Total costs: R$42.000 (US$21,000)

Role: Co-Investigator

Columbia Global Policy Initiative

Planning Grant

Martins & Muenning (MPI) 10/01/14-02/28/14

The Epidemiology of E-Cigarette Use in the Americas and in Europe: Implications for country-level regulation

Total Costs: $15,000

Role: Principal Investigator

Columbia University Injury Center Exploratory Research Grant Suglia (PI) 12/01/15-11/30/15

Epidemiology of Child Maltreatment-related Emergency Department Visits

We aim to examine the Nationwide Emergency Department Sample (2006-2011) to explore correlates of emergency department (ED) maltreatment visits.

Total Costs; $7,500

Role; Co-investigator

FAPESP 2014/05363-7 (São Paulo State Research Agency), Brazil Chiavegatto-Filho (PI) 08/01/2014- 07/31/2016

Cities and mental health: Examining social determinants of mental disorders in large urban areas in a multicentric analysis of the World Mental Health Survey Initiative

This project aims to identify and analyze the social determinants of mental disorders in the ten megacities (cities with more than 10 million inhabitants) of the World Mental Health Survey Initiative (WMHSI) totaling around 20,000 individuals (average of 2,000 per megacity), representing a reasonably well-distributed sample from low (Nigeria and China), medium (Brazil, Argentina and Mexico) and high (United States and France) income countries.

Total costs: R$150,165 (US$57,755)

Role: Co - Principal Investigator

FAPESP 2011/51658-0 (São Paulo State Research Agency), Brazil Sanchez (PI) 06/20/2012- 06/20/2016

PATTERns of Alcohol and Drug consumption in nightclubs: epidemiology, Ethnography and intervention (“Padrões de consumo de álcool e outras drogas nas baladas: epidemiologia, etnografia e intervenção”)

This study aims to first investigate the patterns of alcohol and drug use among youth who attend nightclubs in São Paulo city and to develop a web-based intervention to reduce binge drinking and drug use among youth.

Total costs: R$ 517,037,50 Brazilian Reais (US$254.315,05)

Role: Co-Investigator

Columbia University- Provost’s Office Martins & Keyes (MPI) 05/01/15- 08/01/16

Principles of Epidemiology: a flipped classroom proposal

The goal of this proposal is to implement a “flipped” classroom model for Principles of Epidemiology (P6400), the introductory epidemiology course for public health degree students, which would combine the best aspects of the traditional and digital courses.

Total Costs: $20,000

Role: Principal Investigator

UR008509 Columbia University President’s Global Innovation Fund Martins (PI) 12/01/2013-11/30/2016

Urbanicity, childhood trauma and adolescent comorbid psychopathology in Brazil and Chile (in cooperation with Columbia university department of epidemiology)

The specific aims of this project are to: 1) Assess, in a pilot 2-wave multistage probability sampling school-based epidemiologic study of 180 children aged 12 year-old in two large neighborhoods in São Paulo, Brazil and Santiago, Chile, changes in comorbidity among the key psychiatric disorders/symptomatology described above during the developmental shift from childhood to adolescence; and 2) Examine the relative influence of previous child traumatic events (events prior to age 12) on comorbidity among DEP, ANX, CD and SUD, and to assess the extent to which these relations are mediated/moderated by ecological stressors.

Total costs: $214,991 (direct costs only)

Role: Principal Investigator

CNPq- Brazil Caetano (PI) 01/01/15- 12/31/17

TRAUMA, MENTAL HEALTH AND EARLY CHILDHOOD DEVELOPMENT

The overall aim of this proposal is to conduct a cross-sectional study on trauma and mental health among 1,250 4 to 6 year old children attending preschool in Brazil and their mothers.

Total costs: R$280,000 (US$108,000)

Role: Co-Investigator

Office of the Provost

Martins (PI) 06/01/17- 05/31/18

Principles of Epidemiology: an upgraded flipped classroom proposal

Based on qualitative and quantitative feedback our team received in 2016, we are requesting funds in order to redesign and upgrade this course for Fall 2017. This specific course upgrade would further leverage digital technologies to improve student participation and learning outcomes among students in both the flipped classroom and online-only versions of P6400. The specific aims of this upgrade are as follows: (1) Improve interactions between students and faculty instructors through the use of online discussion and feedback tools; (2) Increase students’ engagement in course video watching and seminars; (3) Redesign group projects to foster consistent engagement among students with different backgrounds.

Total costs: $10,000

Role: Principal Investigator

CNPq- 404990/2013-4 & 448093/2014-6Tolentino (PI) 12/06/2013- 12/31/2017

FACTORS ASSOCIATED WITH ACCESS TO HEALTHCARE USE IN MANAUS, BRAZIL

This study will investigate socio-economic, environmental, psychiatric symptoms, quality of life and access to healthcare use among a representative sample of residents of Manaus, in the northern region of Brazil.

Total costs: R$ 499.364.88 (US$ 161.085,54)

FAPESP- Brazil 2016/11202-1 Perissinoto (PI) 09/01/2016 – 08/31/2018

Title: Receptive and expressive language abilities of pre-school children in the municipality of Embú das Artes, in the State of São: risk and protection factors of mental health

Purpose: This project is to expand the speech-language assessment by evaluating receptive and expressive language abilities and hearing screening of the epidemiological sample of preschoolers in Embu, Brazil.

Total Costs: (R$ 184.676,25- Brazilian Reais)  US$ 50,000.00

Role: Co-Investigator

1R21DA042757                 Daniulaityte (PI) 08/01/2016 - 07/31/2018        

NIH/NIDA                                                                       

Characterizing Fentanyl Outbreaks: Ethnographic and Forensic Perspectives

The overall purpose of this study is to characterize non-pharmaceutical fentanyl (NPF) outbreaks through the integration of ethnographic/qualitative assessment of active user knowledge and experiences of NPF use, and the results from forensic analyses conducted by the postmortem toxicology and crime laboratories at Montgomery County Coroners Office/Miami Valley Regional Crime Laboratory.

Total Costs: $401,978

Role: Consultant

3R01DA037866-05S2 (Martins)

09/01/18 – 08/31/19

NIH/NIDA State medical marijuana laws and NSDUH marijuana use and consequences since 2004-administrative supplement

This study will use detailed information from the National Survey on Drug Use and Health restricted-use files to identify the possible effects of state-level variation in specific aspects of MML on the prevalence of MU and marijuana disorders, whether MML is followed by change in individual risk for other substance use, and if MML moderates racial/ethnic and age-related differences in the individual risk for consequences related to MU. This will be the first study to examine the direct effects of MML on marijuana acquisition patterns and prices. This study will address questions of major public health significance, adding important knowledge about fast changing marijuana laws and their effects on marijuana use among adults and adolescents, contributing to general knowledge about the relationship of legislation to substance use.

Role: Principal Investigator

Pending Support

CTSA/EPI Intervention and Implementation Science Pilot Awards Martins & Landau (MPI) 11/01/2019- 10/30/2020

DESIGNING A SHARED-DECISION MAKING INTERVENTION FOR OPIOID PRESCRIBERS

This intervention will propose tailored recommendations for postsurgical pain management in adults for all opioid prescribers in three CUIMC departments (OBGYN, General & Orthopedic Surgery). Our overarching goal is to change postoperative opioid prescribing patterns at CUIMC by offering cognitive and clinical decision aids to surgeons and opioid prescribers and introduce institutional shared-decision making to reduce the likelihood of persistent opioid use in opioid-naive surgical patients.

Total costs: $75,000

Role: Multi-Principal Investigator (MPI)

PL1HD101099 Factor-Litvak, Martins, Thomason & Thompson (MPI) 09/01/2019- 08/31/2022

NIH/NICHD

HEALON: Helping to End Addiction Over the Long-Term from Opioid Exposure among Neonates Consortium

The brain grows rapidly during fetal development and continuing through the first two years of life, yet no data are available to determine if maternal opioid use during pregnancy influences such growth. We propose to establish a birth cohort of children born to mothers who used and did not use opioids during pregnancy and evaluate the effects of such exposure on developmental, behavioral, and brain growth outcomes.

Total costs: $7,206,645

Role: Multi-Principal Investigator (MPI)

T32GM135745 Wingood, Navas-Acien, Martins & Goldsmith (MPI) 02/01/2020- 01/31/2025

NIH/NIMHD

IMSD at Columbia’s Mailman School of Public Health

The purpose of this IMSD at Columbia's Mailman School of Public Health is to increase the diversity of students who receive doctoral training in public health and contribute to public health research focusing on those groups that experience disparities in health

Total costs: $1,661,635

Role: Multi- Principal Investigator

K01DA049900

Nesoff (PI) 12/01/2019-11/30/2024

NIH/NIDA 

Neighborhoods, Mental Health, and the Prevention of Opioid Overdose: A Mixed Methods Approach

The broad objective of this study is to investigate modifiable neighborhood factors which impact mental health and which may contribute to opioid overdose risk. The study will achieve the following interconnected specific aims using mixed quantitative/qualitative approaches with fatal overdose data from New York City and original in-depth interviews with people who use drugs.

Role: Primary mentor

P50 DA0407860

Martins (PI) 07/01/2019 – 06/30/2024

NIH/NIDA

The Columbia Policy and Health Initiatives for Opioids and other Substances (PHIOS) Center

The United States is in the midst of an unprecedented substance use crisis. Little is known about which are the most effective combinations of social and drug use policies for individuals, families, and communities affected by the epidemic. We request funds from NIDA PAR-18-224 to launch a new transdisciplinary center. The Columbia Policy and Health Initiatives for Opioids and other Substances (PHIOS) Center will integrate University-wide resources and much needed transdisciplinary expertise to rapidly capture emerging social and policy trends, and generate new knowledge toward novel solutions to the US opioid and substance use crisis.

Total costs: $4,999,995

Role: Principal Investigator

Educational Contributions

Direct Teaching/Precepting/Supervising

Fall 2013- Present- Director of P6400- Principles of Epidemiology - Fall 2013 (125 registered graduate students), Fall 2014 (97 registered students), Fall 2015 (75 registered students), Fall 2016 (78 registered students in the flipped classroom course and 15 registered students in the online-only version of the course), Fall 2017 (99 registered students in the flipped classroom course and 18 registered students in the online-only version of the course), Fall 2018 (110 registered students in the flipped classroom course and 20 registered students in the online-only version of the course, Fall 2019 (102 registered students in the flipped classroom course and 22 registered students in the online-only version of the course)

2019- Guest Lecturer at the Global Mental Health MPH Certificate in Global Heath, Columbia University, April 10 2018

· The Global Burden of Substance Use and Substance Use Disorder

2019- Lecturer at the Substance Abuse Epidemiology Training Program Seminar Series, Department of Epidemiology, Columbia University, New York, NY, February 26 2019 (graduate level-9 students)

· Medical marijuana law associations with nonmedical prescription opioid use and opioid use disorders: recent findings by age and race/ethnicity

Spring 2018- Co-Instructor at OSCP8798- Seminar in Research and Professional Development (Doctoral level – 10 students enrolled)

2018- Guest Lecturer at P8470- The Epidemiology of Alcohol and Drug Problems, September 25 2018 (Master and Doctoral Level - 15 students enrolled)

· Recent trends on Prescription Opioid and Heroin Use

Fall 2018- Co-Instructor at OSCP8798- Seminar in Research and Professional Development (Doctoral level – 10 students enrolled)

2018- Guest Lecturer at the Global Mental Health MPH Certificate in Global Heath, Columbia University, April 04 2018

· The Global Burden of Substance Abuse

2018- Lecturer at the Global Mental Health Program Grand Rounds Series, Department of Psychiatry, Columbia University, March 26 2018

· Violence, mental health and early childhood development in Brazil:  initial findings from a collaborative study

Spring 2018- Co-Instructor at OSCP8798- Seminar in Research and Professional Development (Doctoral level – 12 students enrolled)

2017- Guest Lecturer at P8470- The Epidemiology of Alcohol and Drug Problems, October 30 2017 (Master and Doctoral Level - 15 students enrolled)

· Recent trends on Prescription Opioid and Heroin Use

Fall 2017- Co-Instructor at OSCP8798- Seminar in Research and Professional Development (Doctoral level – 12 students enrolled)

2017- Guest Lecturer at P8470- The Epidemiology of Alcohol and Drug Problems, September 12 2017 (Master and Doctoral Level- 15 students enrolled)

· Overview of the National Survey of Drug Use and Health

2017- Lecturer at the Injury Cluster Seminar Series, Department of Epidemiology, Columbia University, New York, NY, February 02 2017(graduate level-25 students)

· Child Maltreatment and Consequential Future Outcomes

2016- Lecturer at the Columbia University Department of Psychiatry Substance Abuse Division T32 Seminar Series, New York, NY, October 27, 2016 (graduate level, 08 fellows)

· Recent Trends in Nonmedical Prescription Opioid Use, Opioid Use Disorder and Heroin Use in the U.S.

2015- Course Instructor- Epidemiology and Population Health Summer Institute, Department of Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University, June 13, 2015 (graduate level, 10 students)

· Analysis of Complex Survey Data

2014- Course Instructor- Epidemiology and Population Health Summer Institute, Department of Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University, June 14, 2014 (graduate level, 08 students)

· Analysis of Complex Survey Data

2013- Course Instructor- Epidemiology and Population Health Summer Institute, Department of Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University, June 12, 2013 (graduate level, 07 students)

· Analysis of Complex Survey Data

2011- Course Instructor- Department of Mental Health, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health Summer Institute

330.818.11 (1 credit) - June 15-16th, 2011(graduate level, 06 students).

· Analysis of Mental Health and Substance Abuse Epidemiological Survey Data

2015- Guest Lecturer at P8470- The Epidemiology of Alcohol and Drug Problems, September 15 2015 (Master and Doctoral Level- 05 students enrolled)

· Nonmedical Use of Prescription Drugs

· Overview of the National Survey of Drug Use and Health

2015- Lecturer at the Substance Abuse Training Program Faculty Fellow Seminar, October 1 2015 (Doctoral and Post-Doctoral Level- 06 trainees)

· Journal Club facilitator

2014- Lecturer at the Substance Abuse Training Program Faculty Fellow Seminar, October 23 2014 (Doctoral and Post-Doctoral Level- 06 trainees)

· Mock review of a recently funded NIDA grant proposal

2014- Lecturer at the Psychiatric Epidemiology Training Program Faculty Fellow Seminar, October 23 2014 (Doctoral and Post-Doctoral Level)

· What we have learned about adolescent gambling by following a cohort of inner-city youth

2014- Guest Lecturer at P8470- The Epidemiology of Alcohol and Drug Problems, October 23 2014 (Master and Doctoral Level- 06 students enrolled)

· Nonmedical Use of Prescription Drugs

2014- Guest Lecturer at P9415 Epidemiology of Drug Abuse in Community Samples, March 05 2014 (Master and Doctoral Level- 06 students enrolled)

· Community-based studies on nonmedical prescription opioid use in the U.S.

2014- Guest Lecturer at the Global Mental Health T32 Seminar Series, Department of Psychiatry, Columbia University, June 10th 2014.

· Recent Patterns of Alcohol and Illegal Drug use among Brazilian Youth and Adults: the role of socioeconomic inequalities

2014- Guest Lecturer at the Brazil Brown Bag Series, Brazil Center, Institute of Latin American Studies, School of International and Public Affairs, Columbia University, April 24th, 2014.

· Recent Patterns of Alcohol and Illegal Drug use among Brazilian Youth and Adults

2013- Guest Lecturer at P8470- The Epidemiology of Alcohol and Drug Problems, September 13 2013 (Master and Doctoral Level- 03 students enrolled)

· Nonmedical Use of Prescription Drugs

2013- Lecturer at the Psychiatric Epidemiology Training Program Faculty Fellow Seminar, October 24 2013 (Doctoral and Post-Doctoral Level)

· Nonmedical use of prescription opioids and prescription opioid use disorders in the USA: recent trends, psychiatric comorbidity and educational attainment.

2013- Invited speaker at the Epidemiology Population and Molecular Health Research Group weekly seminar, Department of Epidemiology, Columbia University, May 07 2013

· Nonmedical Use of Prescription Opioids

2013- Lecturer at the Substance Abuse Training Program Faculty Fellow Seminar, April 16 2013 (Doctoral and Post-Doctoral Level- 05 trainees)

· Navigating the National Survey on Drug Use and Health: an overview of methodology and available data

2013- Guest Lecturer at P9415 Epidemiology of Drug Abuse in Community Samples, March 05 2013 (Master and Doctoral Level- 09 students enrolled)

· Community-based studies on nonmedical prescription opioid use in the U.S.

2012- Lecturer at the Substance Abuse Training Program Faculty Fellow Seminar, October 9 2012 (Doctoral and Post-Doctoral Level- 05 trainees)

· The importance of survey design settings when analyzing survey data

2012- Guest Lecturer at P8470- The Epidemiology of Alcohol and Drug Problems, September 13 2012 (Master and Doctoral Level- 20 students enrolled)

· Nonmedical Use of Prescription Drugs

2011- Guest Lecturer (taught one-day workshop) at the Center of Studies on Alcohol and Drugs (GREA), Department of Psychiatry, University of São Paulo, Brazil (graduate level: 08 students)- Brazil, July 22nd, 2011.

· Introduction to Stata, Survey design commands when analyzing Survey Data,

Generalized Linear Models with Stata, Survival Analyses Methods from samples with complex design in Stata

2011- Guest Lecturer (taught two-day course as part of a four day course) at the Peruvian National Institute of Mental Health, Lima, Peru (graduate level- 60 students), February 11-12th, 2011.

· Latent Class Regression with Complex Survey Design

· Factor Mixture Models

· Growth Models

· Hands-on data analysis with M-plus of Peruvian Alcohol Dependence Data

2011- Guest Lecturer (taught one-day workshop) at the Research Center on Alcohol and Drugs (CPAD), Department of Psychiatry, Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil (graduate level: 10 students, January 21st, 2011.

· Introduction to Stata, Survey design commands when analyzing Survey Data,

Generalized Linear Models with Stata, Survival Analyses Methods from samples with complex design in Stata

2010- Guest Lecturer at the Brazilian Center in Information on Drugs (CEBRID), Department of Psychobiology, Federal University of São Paulo (graduate level: 16 students)- Brazil, October 18th, 2010.

· Examples of drug abuse epidemiology studies published in journals with high impact factors

2010- Lecturer at JHSPH Department of Mental Health’s Graduate students seminar (graduate level: 15 students), Baltimore, MD, November 15th, 2010.

· Data from National Datasets

2010- Co-chair and lecturer- Workshop: Epidemiology and Public Health Research Methods. 72nd College on Problems of Drug Dependence Annual meeting, CPDD, Scottsdale, Arizona, June 13 2010.

· Methods issues in research on non-medical prescription drug use and dependence.

2010- Guest Lecturer (taught one-day workshop) at the Brazilian Center in Information on Drugs (CEBRID), Department of Psychobiology, Federal University of São Paulo (graduate level: 08 students)- Brazil, May 24th, 2010.

· Survival Analyses Methods from samples with complex design in Stata

· Generalized Estimating Equations Methods in Stata

2010- Guest Lecturer (taught one-day workshop) at the Brazilian Center in Information on Drugs (CEBRID), Department of Psychobiology, Federal University of São Paulo (graduate level: 08 students)- Brazil, April 8th, 2010.

· How to use Survey design commands when analyzing Survey Data with Stata

· Data from U.S. National Datasets

Generalized Linear Models with Stata

2009- Lecturer at JHSPH Department of Mental Health’s Graduate students seminar (graduate level: 20 students), Baltimore, MD, November 13th, 2009.

· Data from National Datasets

2009- Lecturer at JHSPH Department of Mental Health’s course 330.652.01 Seminar on program planning in developing countries on drug abuse and other health problems II (graduate level: 10students), Baltimore, MD, November 12th, 2009.

· Nonmedical prescription drug use in the USA

2009- Lecturer at JHSPH Department of Mental Health’s Drug Dependence Epidemiology Training Program Seminar Series (graduate level: 10 students), Baltimore, MD, May 21st, 2009.

· Latent Class Analysis

2009- Lecturer at JHSPH Department of Mental Health’s Graduate students seminar (graduate level: 20 students), Baltimore, MD, March 10th, 2009.

· How to use Survey design commands when analyzing Survey Data with Stata

2008- Guest Lecturer at JHSPH Department of Mental Health’s course 330.602 “Epidemiology of Drug Dependence” (graduate level: 25 students), Baltimore, MD, November 4th, 2008.

· Recent Trends in Nonmedical Opioid Analgesic Use in the USA

2007- Guest Lecturer at JHSPH Department of Mental Health’s course 330.643 “Alcohol, Tobacco and other drugs and public health (graduate level: 30 students), Baltimore, MD, October 3rd, 2007.

· Conditional substance dependence by psychiatric diagnosis in the US population.

2005- Guest Lecturer at JHSPH Department of Mental Health’s course “Epidemiology of Drug and Alcohol Dependence, (graduate level), Baltimore, MD, November 29th, 2005.

· Ecstasy use in the USA from 1995 to 2001: comparison with marijuana users and association with other drug use.

2005- Guest Lecturer at JHSPH Department of Mental Health’s course 330.643 “Alcohol, Tobacco and other drugs and public health, (graduate level: 25 students), Baltimore, MD, October 5th, 2005.

· Gambling disorders among African-American adolescents: association with drug use, drug abuse/dependence and deviant behaviors.

2005- Guest Lecturer at JHSPH Department of Mental Health’s course 330.643 “Alcohol, Tobacco and other drugs and public health, (graduate level: 25 students), Baltimore, MD, October 5th, 2005.

· Recent-onset Ecstasy users: association with other drug use, psychiatric comorbidity and deviant behaviors.

2001-2003- Teaching Assistant- General Psychiatry to 4th year Medical students, University of São Paulo Medical School, Brazil (responsible for lecture preparations, several lecture presentations and patient interviews during classes).

Topics: Depressive disorders, Anxiety disorders, Substance-related disorders – Treatment, Volition and impulsivity, Personality disorders, Pathological gambling and other impulse control disorders.

Advising and Mentoring

Undergraduate Summer students

June-July 2019- Aish Lovett- Global Mental Health Summer Scholar

June-July 2018- Jasmine Gonzalez- CDC Summer Public Health Scholar

June-July-2018 -Gregory Person- CDC Summer Public Health Scholar

Master’s Thesis Trainee

September 2019- present- Megan Marziali, MPH candidate, Department of Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University, advisor

May 2019- August 2019- Nita Arvith, MPH candidate, Department of Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University, practicum advisor

May 2019- October 2019- Catherine Nguyen, MPH candidate, Department of Population and Family Health, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University, practicum advisor

June 2019- December 2019- Carolina Torres, MPH candidate, Department of Population and Family Heath, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University, global health practicum advisor

January 2019-June 2019- Mathew McCaleb, MPH candidate, CUNY School of Public Health, practicum advisor

July 2018- May 2020, Robert Perry, MPH candidate, Department of Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University- advisor

July 2018- May 2019, Stephanie Izard, MPH candidate, Department of Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University- primary thesis reader

January 2018- May 2018 –Nayaab Khawar, MPH candidate, Department of Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University- primary thesis reader

September 2017- May 2018 –Nicole Khauli, MPH candidate, Department of Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University- primary thesis reader

September 2017- May 2018 –Shivani Mantha, MPH candidate, Department of Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University- primary thesis reader

September 2017- May 2018 –Emily Boller, MPH candidate, Department of Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University- primary thesis reader

September 2017- May 2018 –Shuyue Ni, MPH candidate, Department of Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University- primary thesis reader

September 2017- May 2018 –Julia Schleimer, MPH candidate, Department of Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University- primary thesis reader

September 2017- May 2018 –Amber Seligson, Executive MPH candidate, Department of Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University- primary thesis reader

September 2017- May 2018 - Myrela Bauman, MPH/MPA candidate, Department of Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University- advisor

June 2017- May 2018- Amruta Roude, MPH candidate, Department of Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University, practicum advisor

June 2017- May 2018- Anjali Ramoutar, MPH candidate, Department of Sociomedical Sciences, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University, practicum advisor

June 2017- May 2018- Nitasha Sharma, MPH candidate, Department of Sociomedical Sciences, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University, practicum advisor

May 2017- August 2017 –Trevor Alford, MPH candidate, Department of Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University- practicum advisor

May 2017- May 2018- Chloe Lee, MPH candidate, Department of Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University, practicum advisor

December 2016- May 2017-Kevin Silverman- MPH candidate, Department of Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University- primary thesis reader

September 2016- May 2017- Kiran Grover- MPH candidate, Department of Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University- primary thesis reader

September 2016- May 2017-Caroline Hugh- MPH candidate, Department of Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University- second thesis reader

September 2016- May 2017- Mindy Brittner- MPH candidate, Department of Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University- primary thesis reader

September 2016- Present-Shivani Mantha- MPH candidate, Department of Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University- advisor and primary thesis reader

July 2016- May 2017- Shannon Healy- MPH candidate, Department of Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University- Global Mental Health practicum mentor and primary thesis reader- 2017 recipient Sidney Kark Award in Global Health from the Department of Epidemiology, Columbia University

September 2015- Present - Katerina Belkin- MPH candidate, Department of Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University- advisor and primary thesis reader

September 2015-May 2016- Owen Tran- MPH candidate, Department of Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University- primary thesis reader

September 2015- May 2016- Alexander Perlmutter- MPH candidate, Department of Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University- primary thesis reader

August 2015- June 2016- Melanie Askari- MPH candidate, Department of Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University- Global Mental Health practicum mentor and primary thesis reader- 2016 recipient Sidney Kark Award from the Department of Epidemiology, Columbia University

June 2015- December 2015- Adena Hernandez, MPH candidate, Department of Socio Medical Sciences, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University- Global Mental Health practicum mentor

June 2015- October 2015- Mariel Rodriguez- MPH candidate, Department of Socio Medical Sciences, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University- Global Mental Health practicum mentor

May 2015- Present- Sara Watchko- MPH candidate, Department of Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University- practicum mentor and primary thesis reader

September 2014- May 2015- Robyn Jordan- MPH candidate, Department of Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University- primary thesis reader

September 2014- May 2015- Natalie Felida - MPH candidate, Department of Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University- primary thesis reader and advisor (in this role since Jan 2015)

September 2014- Present- Sara Watchko- MPH candidate, Department of Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University- advisor

July 2014- May 2015- Chidinma Egbukichi- - MPH candidate, Department of Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University- practicum co-supervisor (with Dr. Keyes)

October 2013- May 2014- Jennifer Yip- MPH candidate, Department of Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University- primary thesis reader

September 2013- May 2015- Gillian McGovern- MPH candidate, Department of Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University- advisor

September 2013- May 2015- Mark Romano- MPH candidate, Department of Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University- advisor and primary thesis reader

June 2013- May 2014- Leona Zahlan- MPH candidate, Department of Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University- primary thesis reader

April 2013- May 2014- Suven Cooper- MPH candidate, Department of Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University- primary thesis reader

September 2012- May 2013- Deysia Levin, MPH candidate, Department of Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University- primary thesis reader

September 2008- May 2009- Grace P. Lee, MHS Candidate, Department of Mental Health, Johns Hopkins University

Ph.D. Trainee

September 2017- Present- Luis Segura- DrPh candidate, Department of Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University, foundation essay mentor and chair of dissertation committee

September 2017- Present- Alexander Perlmutter- PhD candidate, Department of Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University- advisor and T32 primary mentor

September 2016- June 2018- Michelle Nolan- PhD candidate, Department of Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University- advisor

September 2015- June 2017- Emily Greene- PhD candidate, Department of Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University- advisor and T32 mentor and dissertation committee chair- successfully defended dissertation on June 2017- current position: post-doctoral fellow, Department of Epidemiology, Columbia University

September 2015- Present- Emilie Bruzelius- PhD candidate, Department of Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University- advisor, foundation essay mentor, and dissertation sponsor

April 2015- Present- Alexis Rivera- PhD candidate, Department of Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University- advisor

September 2013- Present- Adriana Maldonado-Martinez- PhD candidate, Department of Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University- advisor, foundation essay mentor and dissertation sponsor

September 2012- September 2017- June Kim, PhD Candidate, Department of Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University- successfully defended dissertation on September 11 2017- current position: post-doctoral fellow, CUNY Graduate Center

2009- 2013 - Grace P. Lee- PhD Candidate, Department of Mental Health, JHSPH (Co-advisor together with Dr. Elizabeth Stuart). Student used data collected under my NICHD-funded grant for dissertation defended on July 26 2013 - current position: Clinical Trials Results Analyst-Associate, ICF International.

2010-2014 - Lian-Yu Chen -PhD Candidate, Department of Mental Health, JHSPH (Co-advisor together with Dr. Ramin Mojtabai until July 2012) - current position: Assistant Professor, Department of Psychiatry, Cheng Kung University School of Medicine, Taipei, Taiwan.

Ph.D. Examination, Advisory and Defense Committees

01/2015- Approved Dissertation Sponsor for the PhD program in Epidemiology, Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Columbia University

Adriana Maldonado, PhD Candidate, Department of Epidemiology, Columbia University doctoral Dissertation Committee Sponsor, internal proposal defense, 08/08/19

Malak Alhusaini, PhD Candidate, Columbia University School of Nursing, doctoral Dissertation Committee external reader, dissertation defense, 01/24/2018

Julian Santaella, PhD Candidate, Department of Epidemiology, Columbia University, doctoral Dissertation Committee Chair, internal proposal defense, 09/18/17

June Kim- PhD Candidate, Department of Epidemiology, Columbia University, doctoral Dissertation Committee Sponsor, internal proposal defense, 08/04/16, external proposal defense, 09/08/2016, dissertation defense, 09/11/17

Emily Greene- PhD Candidate, Department of Epidemiology, Columbia University, doctoral Dissertation Committee Chair, internal proposal defense, 07/27/16, external proposal defense, 09/09/2016, dissertation defense, 06/13/17

Maria Parker- PhD Candidate, Department of Epidemiology, Michigan State University, doctoral dissertation committee member- defense date 05/17/16 – current position: Post-doctoral fellow, Vermont Center on Behavior and Health, University of Vermont, Burlington, VT.

Justin Knox- PhD Candidate, Department of Epidemiology, Columbia University- chairperson of Doctoral Dissertation Committee, internal proposal defense, 05/04/15, external proposal defense, 06/04/15

Keisha Harris- PhD Candidate, Department of Epidemiology, Columbia University- questioner, external proposal defense, 02/14/15, first reader of Doctoral Dissertation Committee since December 2016, dissertation defense, 06/28/17

Miriam Fenton- PhD Candidate, Department of Epidemiology, Columbia University –second reader of Doctoral Dissertation Committee- internal proposal defense date 12/03/13, external proposal defense date 02/04/14 - current position: Researcher, Center for Health Services Research on Pharmacotherapy, Chronic Disease Management, and Outcomes, and Center for Education and Research on Mental Health Therapeutics, Rutgers University, NJ.

Kamini Shah- PhD Candidate, Department of Health Behavior and Society, Johns Hopkins University- defense date 01/13/09

S. Geoff Severtson- PhD Candidate, Department of Mental Health, Johns Hopkins University- defense date 06/01/09 – current position: Senior Researcher, Rocky Mountain Poison and Drug Center, Denver, CO.

Grace P. Lee- PhD Candidate, Department of Mental Health, Johns Hopkins University- oral examination date 04/08/12, defense date 07/26/13 - current position: Clinical Trials Results Analyst-Associate, ICF International.

Other Trainee Advisory Roles

Special Studies Advisor

2007-2009- S. Janet Kuramoto, Department of Mental Health, Johns Hopkins University- current position: Senior Researcher, Associate, American Psychiatric Institute for Research and Education

2008-2010- Su Yeon Lee, Department of Mental Health, Johns Hopkins University- current position: Policy Analyst, Office for Research on Disparities and Global Mental Health, NIMH- NIH

2009-2011- Lauren Pacek (nee Ropelewski), Department of Mental Health, Johns Hopkins University- current position: Assistant Professor, Duke University Department of Psychiatry,

2011-2013- Pia Mauro, Johns Hopkins University, current position: Assistant Professor,

Department of Epidemiology, Columbia University

Junior Faculty Mentor

2017-present- Pia Mauro (faculty primary mentor and K-award primary mentor)

2017-present- Sara Abiola (Department of Health Policy and Management, diversity supplement in one of my projects)

2019- present- Jeremy Kane (faculty co- mentor and K-award primary mentor)

Post-Doctoral Fellow Mentor

2018- present- Emily Greene (mentor)

2018- present- Jose Diaz (co-mentor)

2018- present- Justin Knox (co-mentor)

2017- present- Marine Azevedo Da Silva (mentor)

2017- present- Elizabeth Nesoff (mentor)

2016-2018- Leila Vaez-Azizi (co-mentor)

2016-June 2017- Arthur Robinson Williams (co-mentor) – current position: Assistant Professor of Psychiatry, Department of Psychiatry, Columbia University

2015-June 2017- Pia Mauro (primary mentor) - current position: Assistant Professor of Epidemiology, Columbia University, Department of Epidemiology

2014- March 2017- Qiana Brown (co- mentor) – current position: Assistant Professor, School of Social Work, Rutgers University

2014- Jan 2017- Hannah Carliner (co-mentor) - current position: Assistant Professor, Department of Psychiatry, Columbia University

Post-Doctoral Fellow Co-Advisor (Johns Hopkins University)

2008-2010- Sarra L. Hedden- current position: Researcher at SAMHSA

2009- 2011- Asha Goldweber- current position: Researcher at SRI International

2010-2012- Weiwei Liu- current position: Researcher at NORC at the University of Chicago

2010-2012- Paul Harrell- current position: Assistant Professor at East Virginia Medical School

Other Significant Advising

Mentors the following Department of Psychiatry, University of São Paulo student in research analyses for papers:

2013- present- Joao Mauricio Castaldelli-Maia (PhD candidate), current position: Assistant Professor, Faculdade de Medicina do ABC, Santo Andre, Brasil

Mentors the following Department of Psychiatry, Federal University of São Paulo post-doctoral fellow in data collection and research analyses for papers (Columbia PGIF project):

2014- 2017- Thiago Marques Fidalgo, current position: Medical Officer and Assistant Professor, Department of Psychiatry, Federal University of São Paulo

Mentored the following Department of Mental Health, Johns Hopkins University students in research analyses for papers:

2007-2008- Lilian Ghandour (PhD candidate), current position: Associate Professor, American University of Beirut

2007-2008- Jean Ko (PhD Candidate), current position: Researcher, Centers for Disease Control

2008-2009-Geoff Severtson (PhD candidate), current position: Epidemiologist, RADARS System, Denver Health

2008-2009- Brent Mancha (PhD candidate), current position: Epidemiologist, U.S. Army Institute of Public Health

Mentored the following Department of Preventive Medicine, Federal University of São Paulo, Brazil post-doctoral fellow in research analyses for papers:

2008-2011- Zila Sanchez, current position: Assistant Professor, Department of Preventive Medicine, Federal University of São Paulo

Educational Administration and Leadership

04/19- Member, Faculty Review Committee for Provost’s Teaching and Learning grants

12/18- Present- Improving Prescribing and Pain Management Working group co-leader, Columbia University Irving Center CTSA Opioid Crisis Response Group

01/18- 05/18- School of International and Public Affairs (SIPA), MPH Co-Instructor of project: “Needs Assessment of the Substance Abuse Prevention and Treatment Systems of Care in the Bronx, NY” (6 registered graduate students)

10/17- Present- Substance Use Epidemiology Unit Leader, Department of Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University

01/17- 05/17- School of International and Public Affairs (SIPA), MPH Co-Instructor of project: “Needs Assessment of the Substance Abuse Prevention and Treatment Systems of Care in Staten Island, NY” (6 registered graduate students)

10/16- Present- Advisory Board and Co-Principal Investigator, IMSD at Columbia’s Mailman School of Public Health, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University (8 doctoral fellows)

01/15-Present- Co-Director, T32 Substance Abuse Training Program- Department of Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University (05 predoctoral fellows and 04 postdoctoral fellows every year)

09/12- 01/15-Academic coordinator & Ombudsman- T32 Substance Abuse Training Program- Department of Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University

Instructional/Educational Material used in Print or Other Media

09/2015-07/2016- Recorded videos with the assistance of Columbia University’s Center for Teaching and Learning (CCNMTL) and CCNMTL funds for P6400 (Principles of Epidemiology)- all videos are intended for use in P6400 yearly- flipped classroom and online only modules- Accessible at:

https://www.youtube.com

Users:  [email protected]

Pass:   EPIDP6400

Publications

A. Original, peer reviewed research publications

A.1. Published or In Press

1. Benjet C, Sampson L, Yu S, Kessler R, Zaslavsky A, Evans-Lacko S, Martins SS, Andrade LH, Aguilar-Gaxiola S, Cia A, Medina-Mora ME, Stagnaro JC, Torres Y, Viana MC, Galea S. Associations between neighborhood-0leve violence and individual mental disorders: results from the World Mental Health surveys in five Latin American cities. Psychiatry Research, in press.

2. Martins SS, Ponicki W, Smith N, Rivera -Aguirre A, Davis CS, Fink DS, Castillo-Carniglia A, Henry SG, Marshall BDL, Grienewald P, Cerda M. Prescription Drug Monitoring Programs Operational Characteristics and Fatal Heroin Poisoning. International Journal of Drug Policy, in press.

3. Healy S*, Martins SS, Fidalgo TM, Sanchez ZM. Belief patterns and drug use in a sample of Brazilian youth; an exploratory latent class analysis. Brazilian Journal of Psychiatry, in press.

*Author is student who worked on this paper under my guidance.

4. Silverstein S, Daniulaityte R, Martins SS, Miller SC, Carlson RC. “Everything is not right anymore” Buprenorphine experiences in an era of illicit fentanyl. International Journal of Drug Policy, in press.

5. Philbin MM, Mauro PM, Green ER, Martins SS. State-level marijuana policies and marijuana and marijuana use disorder among a nationally representative sample of adults in the United States, 2015-2017: Sexual identity and gender matter. Drug and Alcohol Dependence, in press.

6. Azevedo da Silva M, Gozalez JC, Person GL, Martins SS. Bidirectional association between bullying perpetration and internalizing problems among youth. Journal of Adolescent Health, in press.

7. Mantha S*, Mauro PM, Mauro CM, Martins SS. Criminal Justice Policy Context and Opioid Agonist Treatment Delivery among Opioid Treatment Admissions, 2015. Drug and Alcohol Dependence, in press.

*Author is student who worked on this paper under my guidance

8. Nesoff ED, Branas C, Martins SS. The geographic distribution of fentanyl-involved overdose deaths in Cook County, Illinois. American Journal of Public Heath, in press.

9. Santaella J, Levy NS, Segura LE, Mauro PM, Martins SS. Cannabis use disorder among people using cannabis daily/almost daily in the United States, 2002-2016. Drug and Alcohol Dependence; in press.

10. Cerda M, Mauro CM, Hamilton A, Levy NS, Santaella-Tenorio J, Hasin DS, Wall MM Keyes KM, Martins SS. Legalization of Recreational Marijuana and association with marijuana use and cannabis use disorder: United States, 2008 – 2016. JAMA Psychiatry, in press. 

11. Tardelli VS*, Fidalgo TM, Santaella J, Martins SS. Medical use, non-medical use and use disorders of Benzodiazepines and Prescription Opioids in adults: differences by insurance status. Drug and Alcohol Dependence; in press.

*Author is student who worked on this paper under my guidance

12. Levy NS*, Duarte CS, Segura LS, Santaella-Tenorio J, Okuda M, Wall, M Chen C, Ramos-Olagazasti MA, Canino G, Bird H, Martins SS. The Longitudinal Effect of Early-Life Sensation Seeking on Gambling and Gambling Problems Among Puerto Rican Young Adults. Psychology of Addictive Behaviors; in press.

*Author is student who worked on this paper under my guidance

13. Perlmutter AS*, Rivera-Aguirre A, Mauro PM, Castillo-Carniglia A, Rodriguez N, Cadenas N, Cerda M, Martins SS. Sex differences in nonmedical prescription tranquilizer and stimulant use among secondary school students in Argentina, Chile, and Uruguay. Drug and Alcohol Dependence; in press.

*Author is student who worked on this paper under my guidance

14. Daniulaityte R, Nahhas RW, Silverstein S, Martins SS, Zaragoza A, Moeller A, Carlson RG. Patterns of Non-Prescribed Buprenorphine and Other Opioid Use Among Individuals with current Opioid Use Disorder: A Latent Class Analysis. Drug and Alcohol Dependence, in press.

15. Segura L*, Mauro CM, Levy NS, Khauli N, Philbin MM, Mauro PM, Martins SS. Association of US medical marijuana laws with nonmedical prescription opioid use and prescription opioid use disorder. JAMA Network Open. 2019, Jul 3;2(7):e197216. doi: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2019.7216.

*Author is student who worked on this paper under my guidance

16. Cerda M, Ponicki W, Smith N, Rivera-Aguirre A, Davis, CS, Marshall BDL, Fink DS, Henry SG, Castillo-Carniglia A, Wintemute GA, Gaidus A, Gruenewald P, Martins SS. Measuring relationships between proactive reporting state-level prescription drug monitoring programs and county-level fatal prescription opioid overdoses. Epidemiology, in press.

17. Li C*, Santaella J, Mauro PM, Martins SS. Past-year use of prescription opioids and/or benzodiazepines among adults in the United States: Estimating medical and non-medical use in 2015-2016. Drug and Alcohol Dependence, in press.

*Author is student who worked on this paper under my guidance

18. Schleimer JP, Rivera-Aguirre AE, Castillo-Carniglia A, Laqueur HS, Rudolph KE, Suárez H, Ramírez J, Cadenas N, Somoza M, Brasesco MV, Martins SS, Cerdá M. Investigating how perceived risk and availability of marijuana relate to marijuana use among adolescents in Argentina, Chile, and Uruguay over time. Drug and Alcohol Dependence, in press.

19. Philbin MM, Mauro PM, Santaella-Tenorio J, Mauro CM, Kinnard EN, Cerdá M, Martins SS. Associations between state-level policy liberalism, cannabis use, and cannabis use disorder from 2004 to 2012: Looking beyond medical cannabis law status. Int J Drug Policy. 2019 Jan 16. pii: S0955-3959(18)30272-X. doi: 10.1016/j.drugpo.2018.10.010. [Epub ahead of print]

20. Mariano M, Caetano SC, Ribeiro da Silva A, Surkan PJ, Martins SS, Cogo-Moreira H. Psychometric property of ECERS-R in an Epidemiological Sample of Brazilian Preschool Children. Early Education and Development, in press.

21. Sanchez ZM, Santos MGR, Carlini CM, Martins SS. Sexual Aggression in Brazilian Nightclubs: Associations with Patron’s Characteristics, Drug Use, and Environmental Factors. Archives of Sexual Behavior, 2019 Feb;48(2):609-618. PMID: 30552603.

22. Pear VA, Ponicki WR, Gaidus A, Keyes KM, Martins SS, Fink DS, Rivera-Aguirre A, Gruenewald PJ, Cerdá M. Urban-rural variation in the socioeconomic determinants of opioid overdo