Staff
Diana Romero, PhD, MA
Project Director
drr6@columbia.edu
Diana Romero serves as the project's director and
is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Population and Family
Health at Columbia University's Mailman School of Public Health.
Her research interests include social policies related to health
and poverty, and women's reproductive health issues, particularly
among low-income Hispanic and African-American populations. Dr.
Romero also is a medical writer with several years experience writing
and editing publications on women's health and contraceptive technologies
in particular.
Lauren Smith, MD, MPH
Investigator
lauren.smith@bmc.org
Lauren Smith is Medical Director of the Pediatric
Inpatient Unit at Boston Medical Center and an Assistant Professor
of Pediatrics at the Boston University School of Medicine. She completed
her pediatric residency and Chief Residency at Children's Hospital-Boston,
and a fellowship in general pediatrics at Boston Medical Center.
Dr. Smith's clinical and research activities primarily focus on
improving the health of underserved populations. She recently received
a Robert Wood Johnson Faculty Development grant.
Liza Camellerie, BA, BS
Project Coordinator
lc2075@columbia.edu
Liza Camellerie serves as Project Coordinator for
Finding Common Ground. She has extensive experience in media and
communications, having worked on socially oriented programs at MTV
and a PBS documentary on women's health care in the United States.
While in college, she worked at the National Organization for Women
on issues such as Violence Against Women and the Equity in Prescription
and Contraceptive Coverage Acts. Ms. Camellerie received Bachelor's
degrees in American Studies and Communications.
Julia Jung Choe, BA
Project Coordinator
jjc2004@columbia.edu
Julia Choe is a Masters student in Population and
Family Health at Columbia University's Mailman School of Public
Health and serves as Project Coordinator for Finding Common Ground.
Prior to her graduate study, Ms. Choe conducted extensive sociological
and clinical research on the health of San Francisco drug users
and women. She has mentored and tutored elementary school aged children
in San Francisco, and continues this work with teens in NYC. She
plans to continue working in public health as an adolescent health
educator.
Barbara Pastrana, MD
Research Assistant
bap2001@columbia.edu
Barbara Pastrana is a graduate student in the Population
and Family Health Program at Columbia University's Mailman School
of Public Health. Before pursuing her studies in the United States,
Dr. Pastrana was the head physician at a rural community clinic
in her native Mexico. After completing her Masters degree, she will
continue to focus on improving maternal and child health care, both
at the patient and community levels.
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