Susan Taylor-Brown
| Title | Clinical Professor |
|---|
| Institution | School of Medicine and Dentistry |
|---|
| Department | Pediatrics |
|---|
| Address | University of Rochester Medical Center School of Medicine and Dentistry 601 Elmwood Ave, Box 671 Rochester NY 14642
|
|---|
|
|
|
| 1988 |
|
| Outstanding Faculty Teaching Award | | 1989 |
|
| Faculty Spring/Summer Research Award | Eastern Michigan University | | 1989 |
|
| Josephine Nevins Keal Professional Development Award | Eastern Michigan University | | 1992 |
-
| 1993 | Who's Who Among Human Services Professionals | | 1996 |
|
| Public Health National Honor Society | Delta Omega | | 1999 |
|
| Certificate of Recognition for Developing Services for HIV+ women and their children | New York State Department of Health | | 1999 |
|
| Certificate of Recognition for caring for HIV affected families | Rochester Area Task Force on AIDS | | 2002 |
|
| Invited to serve on the care-giving and mental health expert panel representing the "Primary Care: Chronic Medical Illness" | Rosalynn Carter Institute for Human Development | | 2004 |
|
| Certificate of Recognition for Developing Services for HIV+ affected families | Rochester Area Task Force on AIDS | | 2004 |
|
| Recognition Award for Youth Adventurers Group - Experiential Group | Greater Rochester Spina Bifida Association | | 2004 |
|
| Last Acts Award for End of Life Texts in Social Work | Robert Wood Johnson Foundation | | 2005 |
|
| Nominated, Ernest A. Lynton Award for Faculty Professional Service and Academic Outreach Award | | 2006 |
|
| Women's Studies Award for Gender Equity Work | Nazareth College |
Dr. Taylor-Brown's research interests include these areas: 1) Health-related clinical and policy research with particular interest in end of life care 2) Grief and loss 3) Palliative care 4) HIV/AIDS 5) Genetics 6) Ethics 7) Family-centered care of medically fragile children 8) Child abuse 9) Community based collaborative service interventions 10) Cultural diversity 11) Developmental disabilities 12) Interdisciplinary teams 13) Chronic illness 14) Prevention
-
Taylor-Brown S, Sormanti M. End-of-life care. Health Soc Work. 2004 Feb; 29(1):3-5.
-
Taylor-Brown S, Garcia A, Kingson E. Cultural competence versus cultural chauvinism: implications for social work. Health Soc Work. 2001 Aug; 26(3):185-7.
-
Keigher S, Taylor-Brown S. Women's health needs special treatment. Health Soc Work. 2001 May; 26(2):67-71.
-
Anderson G, Ryan C, Taylor-Brown S, White-Gray M. HIV/AIDS and children, youths, and families: lessons learned. Introduction. Child Welfare. 1998 Mar-Apr; 77(2):101-5.
-
Taylor-Brown S, Teeter JA, Blackburn E, Oinen L, Wedderburn L. Parental loss due to HIV: caring for children as a community issue--the Rochester, New York experience. Child Welfare. 1998 Mar-Apr; 77(2):137-60.
-
Taylor-Brown S, Garcia A. Social workers and HIV-affected families: is the profession prepared? Soc Work. 1995 Jan; 40(1):14-5.
-
Taylor-Brown S, Kumetat SH. Psychosocial aspects of pediatric human immunodeficiency virus and acquired immunodeficiency syndrome: annotated literature review and call for research. J Dev Behav Pediatr. 1994 Jun; 15(3 Suppl):S71-6.
-
Taylor-Brown S, Kumetat SH. What we don't know: children and human immunodeficiency virus. J Dev Behav Pediatr. 1994 Jun; 15(3 Suppl):S77.
-
Taylor-Brown S. The impact of AIDS on foster care: a family-centered approach to services in the United States. Child Welfare. 1991 Mar-Apr; 70(2):193-209.
-
Clarke TA, Maniscalco WM, Taylor-Brown S, Roghmann KJ, Shapiro DL, Hannon-Johnson C. Job satisfaction and stress among neonatologists. Pediatrics. 1984 Jul; 74(1):52-7.
-
Taylor-Brown S, Johnson KH, Hunter K, Rockowitz RJ. Stress identification for social workers in health care: a preventive approach to burn-out. Soc Work Health Care. 1981; 7(2):91-100.
|
Taylor-Brown's Networks
Concepts  Derived automatically from this person's publications. _
Co-Authors  People in Profiles who have published with this person. _
Similar People  People who share similar concepts with this person. _
Same Department
People who are also in this person's primary department.
|