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Professor of Psychology and Health Services
UCLA School
of Public Health
Department of Health Services
UCLA Department of Psychology
College of Letters and Sciences
Box 951563
Los Angeles, CA 90095-1563
Phone: (310)
206-5159
Fax (310) 206-5895
E-Mail: mays@ucla.edu
Website www.MinorityHealthDisparities.org
Vickie
Mays is a Professor in the Department of Psychology in the College
of Letters and Sciences, as well as a Professor in the Department
of Health Services. Professor Mays is also the Director of the
UCLA Center on Research, Education, Training and Strategic Communication
on Minority Health Disparities (www.MinorityHealthDisparities.org).
She teaches courses on health status and health behaviors of
racial and ethnic minority groups, research ethics in biomedical
and behavioral research in racial/ethnic minority populations,
research methods in minority research, as well as courses on
social determinants of mental disorders and psychopathology.
She holds a Ph.D. in Clinical Psychology and an M.S.P.H. in
Health Services, with postdoctoral training in psychiatric epidemiology,
survey research as it applies to ethnic minorities (University
of Michigan) and health policy (RAND).
Professor
Mays' research primarily focuses on the mental and physical
health disparities affecting racial and ethnic minority populations.
She has a long history of research and policy development in
the area of contextual factors that surrounding HIV/AIDS in
racial and ethnic minorities. This work ranges from looking
at barriers to education and services to understanding racial-based
immunological differences that may contribute to health outcome
disparities. Other areas of research include looking at the
role of perceived and actual discrimination on mental and physical
health outcomes, particularly as these factors impact downstream
disease outcomes. Her mental health research examines availability,
access and quality of mental health services for racial, ethnic
and sexual minorities. She is the Co-PI of the California Quality
of Life Survey, a population based study of over 2,200 Californians
on the prevalence of mental health disorders and the contextual
factors associated with those disorders.
Dr. Mays
has provided testimony to a number of Congressional committees
on her HIV, mental health and health disparities research findings.
She recently completed a term as the Chair of the Subcommittee
on Populations of the National Committee on Vital and Health
Statistics. There she helped develop a report on the role of
data collection in the reducing health disparities associated
with race, ethnicity, and primary language. She has received
a number of awards including one for her lifetime research on
women and HIV from AMFAR, a Women and Leadership Award from
the American Psychological Association and several Distinguished
Contributions for Research awards.
Selected
Publications
Keppel, K., Pamuk,
E., Lynch, J., Carter-Pokras, O., Kim, I., Mays, V.M., Pearcy,
J., Schoenbach, V., Weissman, J.S. (2005). Methodological issues
in measuring health disparities. Vital and Health Statistics
2, 141, 1-16.
Walker, B, Mays,
V.M. & Warren, R. (2004). The changing landscape for the
elimination of racial/ethnic health status disparities. Journal
of Health Care for the Poor and Underserved.
15, 4, 506-521.
Mays, V.M., Cochran,
S.D., & Ponce, N.A. (2004). Thinking about race and ethnicity
in population-based studies of health. In B.M. Beech & M.
Goodman (Eds.) Race and Research: Perspectives on Minority Participation
in Health Studies (pp. 79-100). Washington, D.C.: American Public
Health Association.
Mays, V.M., Cochran,
S.D., & Zamudio, A. (2004). HIV prevention research: Are
we meeting the needs of African American men who have sex with
men? Journal of Black Psychology, 30(1), 78-105.
Mays, V.M., Ponce,
N., Washington, D.L. & Cochran, S.D. (2003). Classification
of race and ethnicity: Implications for Public Health. Annual
Review of Public Health, 24, 3-110.
Mays, V.M., Yancey,
A.K., Cochran, S.D., Weber, M. & Fielding, J.A. (2002) Heterogeneity
of health disparities in African American, Hispanic and Asian
American women: The Unrecognized influence of sexual orientation.
American Journal of Pubic Health, 92(4), 632-639.
Mays, V.M. (2001).
Methods for increasing recruitment and retention of ethnic minorities
in health research through addressing ethical concerns. Proceedings
of the Seventh Conference on Health Survey Research Methodology.
Washington, D.C.: National Center for Health Statistics, USDHHS.
Mays, V.M., Cochran,
S.D. & Sullivan, G.. (2000). A Profile of Ethnic Women's
Health Care Services in the United States. In C. Hogue, M.A.
Hargraves & Karen S. Collins (Eds.) Minority Health in America
Findings and Policy Implications from the Commonwealth Fund
Minority Health Survey (pp. 97-123). Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins
University Press.
Mays, V.M. &
Cochran, S.D. (1998). Racial discrimination and health outcomes
in African Americans. Proceedings of the 27th Public Health
Conference on Records and Statistics and the National Committee
on Vital and Health Statistics 47th Annual Symposium. Washington,
D.C. USDHHS.
Mays, V.M., Coleman,
L.M. & Jackson, J.S. (1996). Race-based perceived discrimination,
employment status, and job stress in a national sample of Black
women: Implications for health outcomes. Journal of Occupational
Health Psychology, 1(3), 319-329.
Mays, V.M., Howard-Caldwell, C.S. & Jackson, J.S. (1996).
Mental health symptoms and service utilization patterns of African-American
women. In H.W. Neighbors & J.S. Jackson (Eds.) Black Mental
Health (pp. 161-176). Newbury Park: Sage Publications.
Cochran, S.D. &
Mays, V.M. (1990). Sex, lies and HIV. New England Journal of
Medicine, 322(11), 774-775.
Mays, V.M. &
Albee, G.W. (1989). Theories, models and research on health,
risk and decision-making. In V.M. Mays, G.W. Albee & S.
F. Schneider (Eds.) Primary Prevention of AIDS: Psychological
Approaches (pp. 91-92). Beverly Hills, CA: Sage Publications.
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