Hogben

advertisement
Hogben CV
Matthew Hogben, PhD
Centers For Disease Control & Prevention
Behavioral Interventions & Research Branch, DSTDP
Mail Stop E-44
Atlanta, GA 30333
Phone: 404-639-1833
Fax: 404-639-8622
email: mhogben@cdc.gov
Education
1999
Post-doctoral fellowship (Association of Teachers of Preventive Medicine)
State University of New York Downstate Medical Center, Brooklyn, NY.
1996
Ph.D. Social Psychology
University at Albany, State University of New York, Albany, NY
Dissertation: The social cognitive modeling of the psychological construct of legitimized
aggression.
1994
M.A. Psychology
University at Albany, State University of New York, Albany, NY
Thesis: A report on the frequency and variation by gender of coercive sexual behavior.
1990
B.A. Psychology
University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI.
Thesis (High Honors)
Employment
1999- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, GA.
Job Title: Health Scientist and Branch Chief
Principal duties include:
a.
Supervision of approximately 15 staff in the Behavioral Interventions and Research
Branch, comprising senior scientists, junior scientists, fellows, and interns from
multiple social and behavioral science disciplines and public health professions.
b.
Supervision of and intellectual participation in multi-site behavioral intervention
projects, involving academia, public health professionals and CDC/NIMH staff;
c.
Leading an interdisciplinary team of social scientists overseeing innovative
psychosocial, behavioral, programmatic and epidemiologic interventions to improve
sexually transmitted disease partner management services;
d.
Leadership of collaborative research and program-relevant working groups;
e.
Creation of behavioral research proposals, in-house and as solicitations for outside
applications;
1
Hogben CV
f.
g.
h.
2
Research manuscript production, quantitative data analysis, dissemination of public
health research and conclusions to public health professionals;
National and local survey construction, modification, and analysis;
Combining social science theory with public health goals to improve public health
outcomes.
Examples of principal duties include:
a.
Formal requirements include preparing performance evaluations, review of scientific
and program products for merit, and practicing administrative oversight (approving
leave, telecommuting arrangements). As Branch Chief, I also take a leadership role
in representing behavioral and social science perspectives and expertise as
contributions to STD prevention. Other job activities germane to the high
performance of the Branch include mentoring staff and encouraging senior branch to
mentor of junior staff and exercise leadership in Division-, Center-, and CDC-wide
activities.
b.
The Gonorrhea Community Action Project (GCAP) was a three-site, fourintervention project that ran from 1998 – 2002. As CDC project officer, I held
weekly meetings and biannual group meetings; coordinated, devised, and edited
common measures across sites; wrote the overall descriptive paper with logic model;
ran quantitative analyses for intervention and collateral outcomes; and wrote
technical reviews of project progress. Interventions have been sustained and
expanded at some sites, and research findings have been accepted and published in
several peer-reviewed journals, including the American Journal of Public Health,
Psychology, Health & Medicine, and Sexually Transmitted Diseases. Interventions
include manuals and other instruction for programmatic replication. For example,
replication of some interventions is occurring under independent auspices in New
York.
c.
Program Announcement 00080, co-written by Dr. St. Lawrence and myself during
1999 – 2000, identified a need for innovations to address STD partner management
services and solicited applications to test relevant interventions. I reviewed and
evaluated all applications and held a review panel of national experts on the topic (for
which CDC management services recognized me specially). As Team Leader, I
coordinate and oversee three project officers handling funded projects with
independent goals, as well as act as project officer for two other projects. The team
functions with maximum delegation of authority, collaborating on cross-site analyses.
I have encouraged and produced some common ground across projects, while
promoting their fidelity to their specific interventions. We met yearly during the
course of the program announcement (2001 – 2004), with continued contact since at
all sites. Each of the funded interventions has produced findings with public health
value. Data from two projects aided production of national-level guidance for STD
partner management.
d.
I serve as co-chair of a working group to integrate HIV partner counseling and
referral into STD partner services program operation guidelines: the result will be
new guidance documents for HIV/STD programs. I also chair the subgroup assigned
to partner notification and community-based organization roles. A draft document is
complete as of 8/2006, on schedule. Revision has incorporated advice and feedback
Hogben CV
3
from over 20 professional program organizations, including the National Association
of State and Territorial AIDS Directors and the National Coalition of STD program
Directors. An external review consultation to provide feedback on the complete draft
was just successfully held in 11/2006. On partner services in general, I chair a
Division-level working group designed to continue innovation into STD partner
management, including the translation to program of existing innovative research.
This group, comprising research, economic, training, and program implementation
experts, has designed evaluations for expedited partner therapy protocols, produced
partner management topics for Division priority meetings, and given technical
assistance (internal and external) on state-level program protocols.
e.
Having worked on the conduct and extension of a project aimed at risk reduction
among impoverished persons in New York City prior to joining CDC, I proposed a
supplemental study that would assess STD avoidance strategies already employed by
women entering the main study. The aims were to gather data that would help public
health personnel engaged in risk reduction interventions or programs incorporate any
existing skills women brought with them, especially if those strategies actually had
preventive efficacy. I collected data, analyzed the results, and wrote a manuscript.
Belief in the efficacy of objectively defensible strategies was associated with lower
rates of STD. Collaborators included staff from Emory University and the New York
City Department of Heath and Mental Hygiene.
f.
My publication history on this vita is the principal example. The analysis skills
involved include permutations of the General Linear Model such as (multivariate)
analysis of variance and covariance, logistic and linear regression, factor analysis,
and hierarchical linear modeling. I also use path analysis and structural equation
modeling, employing all of these methods in experimental, longitudinal, and crosssectional designs. An example of consistent presentation to public health
professional audiences is my series of presentations on programmatic partner
management strategies to the various regional committees of the Infertility
Prevention Project.
g.
I have helped conduct, and have written extensively about, a national survey of
public and private physicians with respect to their STD diagnosis, screening, and
partner management strategies. From this survey, I and colleagues have been able to
ascertain gaps in STD screening, private provider opinions about public health
partner notification, with results published in Sexually Transmitted Infections,
Preventive Medicine, and Social Science & Medicine. I written in collaboration with
a physician from Morehouse School of Medicine, which yielded a local survey
mirroring the national one. Findings from that survey are currently under review at
the Journal of the National Medical Association and have led to further research and
training changes at Morehouse.
h.
Each project in which I play a major role ought to have theoretical underpinnings that
I provide. A published example is a Theory of Reasoned Action-based analysis of
baseline data from a risk reduction intervention that took place among incarcerated
women. An ongoing effort is the evolution of behavioral data collected alongside
biological data in the Grady Adolescent STD Project (GRASP). I have outlined the
Reasoned Action and Health Belief Model underpinnings of the original and
Hogben CV
4
collaborated on adding new sections for repeat participants: adult attachment theory
and emotional models of intimate behavior feature most prominently. Social science
application is not confined to my PhD training in social psychology, but also features
individual-level personality and group-level sociological theory. Some formative and
qualitative work draws from anthropology.
Principal Research Interests
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Health care-seeking behaviors and mental frameworks, both explication of those naturally
occurring and devising interventions to increase and improve behaviors.
Applying social science models to public health outcomes and constructing bridges across
behavioral and social science disciplines.
Construct measurement strategies and public health outcome-focused intervention research.
Coercive sexual behavior (including across gender and corresponding personality traits).
Intervention strategies for people seeking health care and for their partners, especially pertaining
to sexually transmitted disease.
Publications (Peer-reviewed)
1996
Hamburger ME, Hogben M, McGowan S, Dawson LJ. Assessing hypergender ideologies: Development
and initial validation of a gender-neutral measure of adherence to extreme gender-role beliefs. Journal of
Research in Personality, 30, 157-178.
Hamburger ME, Lilienfeld SO, Hogben M. Psychopathy, gender, and gender roles: Implications for
antisocial and histrionic personality disorders. Journal of Personality Disorders, 10, 41-55.
Hogben M, Byrne D, Hamburger ME. Coercive heterosexual sexuality in dating relationships of college
students: Implications of differential male-female experiences. Journal of Psychology and Human
Sexuality, 8, 69-78.
1997
Hogben M, Waterman CK. Are all of your students represented in their textbooks? A content analysis of
coverage of diversity issues in introductory psychology textbooks. Teaching of Psychology, 24, 95-100.
1998
Hogben M. Factors moderating the effect of televised aggression on viewer behavior. Communications
Reports, 25, 220-247.
Hogben M, Byrne D. Using social learning theory to explain individual differences in human sexuality.
The Journal of Sex Research, 35, 58-71.
1999
Hogben CV
Hogben M, Wilson TE, Feldman J, Landesman S, DeHovitz J. The influence of HIV-related knowledge
and exposure fears on behavior change and incident STDs. Women & Health, 30(2), 25-37.
Hogben M, Hartlaub MH, Wisely L. Searching for a common core: An examination of human sexuality
textbook references. Teaching of Psychology, 26, 131-134.
2000
Hogben M, Waterman CK. Patterns of conflict resolution within relationships as a function of coercive
sexual behavior by men and women. Sex Roles: A Journal of Research, 43, 341-357.
Hogben M, St. Lawrence JS. HIV/STD risk reduction interventions in prison settings. Journal of
Women’s Health and Gender-based Medicine, 9, 587-592.
2001
Hogben M, Williams SP. Exploring the context of women’s relationship perceptions, sexual behavior,
and contraceptive strategies. Journal of Psychology and Human Sexuality, 13(2), 1-20.
Hogben M, St. Lawrence JS, Eldridge GD. Sexual risk behavior, drug use, and STD rates among
incarcerated women. Women & Health, 34, 63-78.
Hogben M, Gange SJ, Watts DH, Robison E, Young M, Richardson J, Cohen M, DeHovitz J. The effect
of sexual and physical violence on risky sexual behavior and STD among a cohort of HIV-seropositive
women. AIDS & Behavior, 5, 353-361.
Hogben M, Byrne D, Hamburger ME, Osland J. Legitimized aggression and sexual coercion: Individual
differences in cultural spillover. Aggressive Behavior, 27, 26-43.
2002
Hogben M, St. Lawrence JS, Kasprzyk D, Montano D, Counts G, McCree DH, Phillips W, ScharboDeHaan M. Sexually transmitted disease screening in the United States by obstetricians and
gynecologists. Obstetrics and Gynecology, 100, 801-807.
2003
Hogben M, St. Lawrence JS, Hennessy MH, Eldridge GD. Using the Theory of Planned Behavior to
understand STD risk behaviors of incarcerated women. Criminal Justice and Behavior, 30, 187-209.
McCree DH, Liddon N, Hogben M, St. Lawrence JS. National survey of doctors’ actions following the
diagnosis of a bacterial STD. Sexually Transmitted Infections, 79, 254-256.
Golden MR, Hogben M, Handsfield HH, St. Lawrence JS, Potterat JJ, Holmes KK. Partner notification
for HIV and STD in the United States: Low coverage for gonorrhea, chlamydial infection and HIV.
Sexually Transmitted Diseases, 30, 490-496.
McCree DH, Leichliter J, Hogben M, St. Lawrence JS. Human Papillomavirus screening by U.S.
physicians. Preventive Medicine, 36, 159-163.
5
Hogben CV
6
Kerani RP, Golden MR, Whittington WLH, Handsfield HH, Hogben M, Holmes KK. Spatial bridges for
the importation of STD in King County, WA. Sexually Transmitted Diseases, 30, 742-749.
2004
Golden MR, Whittington WLH, Handsfield HH, Miller L, Clark A, Malinski C, Helmers JR, Hogben M,
Holmes KK. Failure of family planning referral and high interest in advanced provision emergency
contraception among women contacted for STD partner notification. Contraception, 69, 241-246.
Hogben M, St. Lawrence JS, Montano D, Kasprzyk D, Phillips WR. Physician opinions of three forms of
STD partner notification: Responses from a national survey. Sexually Transmitted Infections, 80, 30-34.
St. Lawrence JS, Kuo W-H, Hogben M, Montaño DE, Kasprzyk D, Phillips WR. STD care: Variations in
clinical care associated with provider sex, patient sex, patients’ self-reported symptoms or high-risk
behaviors, and partner STD history. Social Science & Medicine, 59, 1011-1018.
Wimberly YH, Hogben M. A portrait of STD care and partner management among Southern physicians.
Southern Medical Journal, 97, 624-630.
Hogben M, Bloom F, McFarlane M, Malotte CK, Fortenberry JD, St. Lawrence JS, GCAP Study Group.
Attendance at STD clinics: A quantitative and qualitative portrait. International Journal of Nursing
Studies, 41, 911-920.
Malotte CK, Ledsky R, Hogben M, Larro M, Middlestadt SE, St. Lawrence JS, Olthoff G, Settlage RH,
VanDevanter NL, GCAP Study Group. Comparison of methods to increase repeat testing in persons
treated for gonorrhea or chlamydia at public sexually transmitted disease clinics. Sexually Transmitted
Diseases, 31, 637-642.
Golden MR, Handsfield HH, Hogben M, Potterat J. HIV partner notification in the United States: A
national survey of program coverage. Sexually Transmitted Diseases, 31, 709-712.
2005
McCree DH, Oh J, Hogben M. Status of and pharmacists’ role in patient-delivered partner therapy for
sexually transmitted diseases. American Journal of Health-Systems Pharmacy, 65, 643-646.
Hogben M, Ledsky R, Middlestadt SE, VanDevanter NL, Messeri P, Merzel C, Bleakley A, Sionean CK,
St. Lawrence JS. Psychological mediating factors in an intervention to promote adolescent health careseeking. Psychology, Health & Medicine, 10, 64-77.
VanDevanter N, Messeri P, Middlestadt SE, Bleakley A, Merzel C, Hogben M, Ledsky R, Malotte CK,
St. Lawrence JS. A community-based approach to increase preventive health care seeking in adolescents:
The Gonorrhea Community Action Project. American Journal of Public Health, 95, 331-337.
Golden MR, Whittington WLH, Handsfield HH, Hughes JP, Stamm WE, Hogben M, Clark A, Malinski
C, Larson J, Thomas KK, Holmes KK. Impact of expedited sex partner treatment on recurrent or
persistent gonorrhea or chlamydial infection: A randomized controlled trial. New England Journal of
Medicine, 352, 676-685.
Hogben CV
7
Hogben M, McCree DH, Golden MR. Patient-delivered partner therapy for sexually transmitted diseases
as practiced by U.S. physicians. Sexually Transmitted Diseases, 32, 101-105.
Gift TL, Malotte CK, Ledsky R, Hogben M, Middlestadt SE, VanDevanter NL, St. Lawrence JS, GCAP
Study Group. A cost-effectiveness analysis of interventions to increase repeat testing in patients treated
for gonorrhea or chlamydia at public sexually transmitted disease clinics. Sexually Transmitted Diseases,
32, 542-549.
Boily M-C, Godin G, Hogben M, Sherr L, Bastos FI. The impact of the transmission dynamics of the
HIV/AIDS epidemic on sexual behaviour: A new hypothesis to explain recent increases in risk-taking
behaviour among men who have sex with men. Medical Hypotheses, 65, 215-226.
Hogben M, Paffel J, Broussard D, Wolf W, Kenney K, George D, Rubin S, Samoff E. STD partner
notification with men who have sex with men: A review and commentary. Sexually Transmitted
Diseases, 32(supp), S43-S47.
2006
Hogben M, Liddon N, Pierce A, Sawyer M, Papp JR, Black CM, Koumans EH. Incorporating adolescent
females’ perceptions of their partners’ attitudes toward condoms into a model of female adolescent
condom use. Psychology, Health & Medicine, 11, 449-460.
Gift T, Hogben M. STD and HIV screening practices of emergency department physicians compared to
physicians in other settings: Results from a national survey. Academic Emergency Medicine, 13, 993996.
Golden MR, Gift TL, Brewer DD, Fleming M, Hogben M, St. Lawrence JS, Thiede H, Handsfield HH.
Peer referral for HIV case-finding among men who have sex with men. AIDS, 20, 1961-1968.
Wimberly YH, Hogben M, Moore S, Fry Y. Sexual health care offered by Southeastern US physicians.
Journal of the National Medical Association, 98, 1924-1929.
Hogben M, Burstein G. Expedited partner therapy for adolescents diagnosed with gonorrhea and/or
chlamydia: A review and commentary. Adolescent Medicine Clinics, 17, 687-695.
Schwartz RM, Malka ES, Augenbraun M, Rubin S, Hogben M, Liddon N, McCormack WM, Wilson TE.
Predictors of partner notification for C trachomatis and N gonorrhoeae: An examination of social
cognitive and psychological factors. Journal of Urban Health, 83, 1095-1104.
2007
Hogben M, McNally T, McPheeters M, Hutchinson A. The effectiveness of HIV partner counseling and
referral services in increasing identification of HIV-positive individuals: A systematic review. American
Journal of Preventive Medicine, 33(Suppl 2), S89-S100.
Hogben M, Wimberly YH, Moore S. Estimating dissemination of Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention STD treatment guidelines from a survey of physicians. International Journal of STD & AIDS,
18, 318-320.
Hogben CV
8
Hogben M. Partner notification for sexually transmitted diseases. Clinical Infectious Diseases, 44, S160S174.
Hogben M, Burstein G. Partner notification for sexually transmitted infections in the obstetrician and
gynecologist office. Contemporary Obstetrics and Gynecology, 52(7), 44-50.
Golden MR, Hughes JP, Brewer DD, Holmes KK, Whittington WLM, Hogben M, Malinski C, Golding
A, Handsfield HH. Evaluation of a population-based program of expedited partner therapy for gonorrhea
and chlamydial infection. Sexually Transmitted Diseases, 34, 598-603.
Schillinger JA, Hogben M. A core area approach to public health partner notification for gonorrhea
control: Comment on Du et al. Sexually Transmitted Diseases, 34, 195-196.
2008
Hogben M, Kissinger P. A review of partner notification for sex partners of men infected with
chlamydia. Sexually Transmitted Diseases, 35(suppl.), S34-S39.
Hodge JG, Pulver A, Hogben M, Bhattacharya D, Brown EF. Expedited partner therapy for sexually
transmitted diseases: Assessing the legal environment. American Journal of Public Health, 98, 238-243.
Hogben M, Kachur R. Partner notification over the internet: Another arrow in the quiver. Sexually
Transmitted Diseases, 35, 117-118.
Martin T, Hogben M, Carlton AL, Liddon NC, Koumans E. Attitudes toward using condoms and
condom use: Differences between sexually abused and non-abused African American female adolescents.
Behavioral Medicine, 34(2), 35-54.
Schwartz RM, Hogben M, Liddon N, Augenbraun M, McCormack WM, Rubin S, Wilson TE. Coping
with a diagnosis of C trachomatis or N gonorrhoeae: Psychosocial and behavioral correlates. Journal of
Health Psychology, 13, 921-929.
Hoffman S, Beckford SL, Kelvin E, Wallace S, Augenbraun M, Hogben M, Liddon N, McCormack W,
Rubin S, Wilson TE. West Indian immigrant and US-born Black STI clinic attendees: Comparison of
HIV/STI risk behaviors, self-efficacy, attitudes, and intentions for condom use and partner notification of
STI. American Journal of Public Health, 98, 2042-2050.
Bernstein K, Beiger E, Karpati A, Hogben M. HIV screening among US physicians, 1999 - 2000. AIDS
Patient Care & STD, 22, 649-656.
Hogben M, Leichliter JS. Social determinants and sexually transmitted disease disparities. Sexually
Transmitted Diseases, 35(Suppl.), S13-18.
Hogben M, Liddon N. Disinhibition and risk compensation: Scope, definitions, and perspective. Sexually
Transmitted Diseases, 35, 1009-1110.
Hogben CV
9
2009
Habel M, Hogben M. Dissemination of public health information through the internet: Expedited partner
therapy. Sexually Transmitted Diseases, 36, 22-24.
In press
Hogben M, Niccolai L. Recent advances in partner notification: Research and programmatic innovation
and intervention. Current Infectious Disease Reports.
Katz D, Hogben M, Dooley S, Golden MR. An evaluation of the reliability of HIV partner notification
disposition coding by Disease Intervention Specialists in the U.S. Sexually Transmitted Diseases.
Eliscu A, Ford K, Hogben M, Chaffee T, Straub D, Shafii T, Huppert J, Burstein GR. Expedited partner
therapy for adolescents diagnosed with chlamydia or gonorrhea: A Society for Adolescent Medicine
position paper. Journal of Adolescent Health. Co-referenced in Pediatrics.
Hoover K, Friedman A, Montano D, Kasprzyk D, Hogben M. Human Papillomavirus disclosure and
partner notification: Instructions from United States physicians and mid-level providers. Sexually
Transmitted Diseases.
Wilson TE, Hogben M, Malka E, Liddon N, McCormack W, Rubin SR, Augenbraun MA. Reducing
sexually transmitted infection rates by improving patient referral for treatment: A randomized, controlled
trial. American Journal of Public Health.
Hogben M, VanDevanter N, Malotte CK, Middlestadt SE, Messeri P, Ledsky R, Bleakley A, Larro M,
Hennessy MH, St. Lawrence JS, GCAP Study Group. Community-tailored interventions to promote
adolescent and young adult health care seeking. In Health care knowledge, attitudes and behaviors
(Columbus F, ed.).
Book Chapters, Invited Commentary, and Other Publications
1998
Hamburger ME, Hogben M, McGowan S, Dawson LJ. Hypergender ideology scale. In C.M. Davis,
W.L. Yarber, R. Bauserman, G. Schreer, & S.L. Davis (Eds.), Handbook of sexuality-related measures
(pp. 287-290). Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.
2002
Hogben, M, Byrne D, McGowan S, Hamburger ME. From conversation to construct: Development of
legitimized aggression in the psychological domain. In F. Columbus (Ed.), Advances in psychology
research, vol. 11 (pp. 153-181). Binghamton, NY: Nova Science Publishers.
2003
Hogben M. Who says words will never hurt you? Contemporary Psychology, 48, 177-179.
Hogben CV
10
2005
[Technical Report] Hogben M, Kahn R, Voigt R. Services and management for partners of syphilisinfected people. In, Fenton (Ed.), Discussion papers for the syphilis elimination effort external
consultation meeting, (pp. 25-34). Syphilis Elimination Effort External Consultation Meeting, Atlanta,
August 1-2.
Hogben M, Schillinger J. A review of and commentary on patient-delivered partner therapy for sexually
transmitted diseases in the United States. Sociedad Iberoamericano. Proprietary web version accessible
at http://www.siicsalud.com/dato/dat044/05901013.htm.
2006
[Technical Report] Handsfield HH, Hogben M, Schillinger JA, Golden MR, Kissinger P, Sparling F.
Expedited partner therapy in the management of sexually transmitted diseases: Review and guidance.
Division of STD Prevention.
2007
Hogben M, Shrier L. Improving STD detection and control through health care-seeking interventions. In,
(SO Aral, JM Douglas, eds.), Behavioral interventions for prevention and control of sexually transmitted
diseases, including HIV (pp. 190-213). New York: Springer.
Hogben M, Brewer D, Golden MR. Partner notification and management interventions for STD program
managers. In, (SO Aral, JM Douglas, eds.), Behavioral interventions for prevention and control of
sexually transmitted diseases, including HIV (pp. 170-189). New York: Springer.
2008
Aral SO, Hogben M, Wasserheit J. STD-related health care seeking and health service delivery.
In Sexually transmitted diseases, 4th ed. (Holmes KK, et al., eds.), pp. 1803-1820. New York: McGrawHill.
Golden MR, Hogben M. A clinical and public health perspective on the ethics of Expedited Partner
Therapy for gonorrhea and chlamydial infection. AMA Virtual Mentor.
DSTDP, DHAP, et al. Recommendations for partner services programs for HIV infection, syphilis,
gonorrhea, and chlamydial infection. MMWR, 57(RR-9).
Manuscripts Under Review
Larro M, Malotte, CK, Penniman T, Hogben M, St. Lawrence JS, VanDevanter NL, Middlestadt SE,
Gaines JW, GCAP Study Group. Outcomes from the Gonorrhea Community Action Project (GCAP)
small media community awareness intervention in Los Angeles County, California.
Hogben CV
11
Golden MR, Brewer DD, Hogben M, Malinski C, Golding A, Holmes KK. Advanced provision
emergency contraception among women receiving partner notification services for gonorrhea or
chlamydial infection: A randomized controlled trial and meta-analysis.
Manuscripts in Preparation
Hogben M, Wynn BA, Habel MA, Koumans E. Correlations between attachment style and risky sexual
behavior among a cohort of female adolescent clinic patients.
Liddon NC, Berkel C, Hogben M, Koumans E. Reasons for agreeing and refusing to have sex: A
qualitative study of adolescent females at a pediatric clinic.
McCree DH, Hogben M. The role of other sexually transmitted diseases in the HIV/AIDS epidemic
among African Americans.
Desai S, Hogben M, Howard L, Koumans E. Sex partner age discrepancies among urban African
American female adolescents: Relationship expectations and sexual behaviors.
Hogben M, Burstein G, Golden MR. Recent advances in sex partner notification.
Hogben M, Kachur R. Partner notification.
Hogben M, Chesson H, Aral SO. Sex education policies and sexually transmitted disease rates at the US
state level.
Safran M, Tihan L, Bergdall AR, Hogben M. Mental health and sexual risk in a cohort of adolescent
females.
Conference Oral Presentations and Posters (* = oral presentation)
1992
*Waterman, Hogben, Stevens. Banned by your book: Do college textbooks contribute to gender, racial,
and heterosexual biases in campus life? Gender Paradoxes on Campus & Russell Sage College.
*Waterman, Stevens, Hogben. Take back the day: A video for stopping peer sexual harassment on
campus. Gender Paradoxes on Campus & Russell Sage College.
1993
*Hogben. A report on the frequency and variation by sex of coercive sexual behaviors. Society for the
Scientific Study of Sexuality.
1994
*Hamburger, Hogben, Dawson, McGowan. The Hypergender Ideology Scale: Initial measurement and
validation. Society for the Scientific Study of Sexuality.
Hogben CV
12
Hogben, Hamburger, Byrne. Proclivity for legitimized aggression: Measurement, construction, and
correlation with sexual coercion. Eastern Psychological Association.
*Hogben, Stevens, Waterman. Do college texts include minorities: Implications for the teaching of
psychology. Conference for Diversity on Campus.
1995
Hamburger, Hogben. Attitudinal correlates of the Hypergender Ideology Scale. American Psychological
Society.
Hogben, Waterman. Addressing diversity issues in introductory psychology textbooks. American
Psychological Society (Teaching Institute).
Hamburger, Hogben, Hamburger. Sexual coercion and perceptions of distress: Do we comprehend the
effects of what we do? Eastern Psychological Association.
Hogben, Hamburger, Lilienfeld. Psychopathy, antisocial personality, and histrionic personality: Testing
a hypothesized link. Eastern Psychological Association.
Pierce, Hogben, Byrne. A method for visually displaying non-causal factor-analytic solutions. Eastern
Psychological Association.
1996
McGowan, Hogben. Explaining how hypergender ideology is related to coercive sexual behavior among
men and women. American Psychological Society.
Hogben. Mediators of the role of legitimized aggression in predicting coercive sexual behavior.
American Psychological Society.
Hogben. Moderators of the effects of televised aggression. Eastern Psychological Association.
1998
*Caloir, Gordon, Hogben, et al. Evaluability of harm reduction in a NYC HIV risk reduction program.
National Harm Reduction Conference.
*Caloir, Gordon, Hogben, et al. Establishing validity for harm reduction measurement in HIV risk
reduction. National Harm Reduction Conference.
1999
Wilson, Hogben, Dittus. Multiple contraceptive use among women at risk for HIV/STDs. HIV
Prevention Conference.
Hogben, Wilson, Minkoff. Condom-related cognitions, patterns of contraceptive use, and condom use
consistency. ATPM Conference.
Hogben CV
13
2000
*Middlestadt, Malotte, Van Devanter, Hogben. The Gonorrhea Community Action Project Stage II:
Logic model and initial data collection. National STD Conference (symposium).
*Hogben, Williams. Modeling the covariance among women’s perceptions of partners, contraception,
and STD prevention. Society for the Scientific Study of Sexuality.
2001
Hogben, Middlestadt, et al. Tailoring interventions to the local context: Lessons learned from the
Gonorrhea Community Action Project. International Society for STD Research.
Hogben, Koumans, et al. Usefulness of a behavioral theoretical model for adolescent girls’ correct
condom use. International Society for STD Research.
*Hogben, Leichliter, et al. Insights into current partner notification from physicians’ perspectives.
International Society for STD Research.
Gee, Koumans, Hogben, et al. Predictors of consistent and correct condom use among adolescents
attending a primary care clinic. International Society for STD Research.
Malotte, Ledsky, Middlestadt, Hogben, et al. Cognitive correlates of intention to return for repeat
screening among persons treated for gonorrhea and/or chlamydia. International Society for STD
Research.
Middlestadt, VanDevanter, Malotte, St. Lawrence, Hogben, et al. Regularly screening female adolescents
for gonorrhea and chlamydia: Correlates among primary care providers in three communities.
International Society for STD Research.
*Middlestadt, VanDevanter, Malotte, St. Lawrence, Hogben, et al. Asking adolescents about sexual
behavior at every visit: Correlations among private providers in three communities. International Society
for STD Research.
*Middlestadt, Hogben, et al. Tailoring interventions to the local context and working with community
partners: Lessons learned from a multi-site, multi-component intervention study. Innovations in Social
Marketing.
2002
*Hogben, VanDevanter, Middlestadt, Larro, Bleakley, Ledsky. Tailoring interventions with common
protocols to local contexts. American Public Health Association (symposium).
Hogben, St. Lawrence, Hennessy, Eldridge. Modeling the STD risk behaviors of imprisoned women.
National STD Conference.
*McCree, Liddon, Hogben, St. Lawrence. Physicians’ actions following the diagnosis of an STD: Results
from a national survey. National STD Conference.
Hogben CV
14
McCree, Liddon, Hogben, St. Lawrence. HPV screening and diagnosis practices: Results from a
national survey. National STD Conference.
*Hogben et al. The Gonorrhea Community Action Project. National STD Conference (symposium).
Boily, Bastos, Hogben, Godin. The putative impact of HAART on individual sexual behavior. XIV
International AIDS Congress.
2003
Hogben, Ledsky, et al. Psychological mediating factors in an intervention promoting adolescent health
care-seeking behaviors. International Society for STD Research.
Hogben, Howard, et al. Correlates of age discrepancies between US adolescents and their sex partners.
International Society for STD Research.
Wimberly, Hogben. Physicians’ STD screening and diagnosis practices in the Southern USA.
International Society for STD Research.
*Hogben, Hill, et al. Differences in sexual risk behaviors between sexually abused and non-abused
female adolescents. International Society for STD Research.
2004
*Hogben, Kissinger, et al. Patient-delivered partner therapy for STD: Evidence and prospects for
implementation. National STD Conference.
*Hogben. Sexually transmitted disease risk factors at multiple levels and their interactions. American
Public Health Association.
2005
*Hogben. Syphilis partner notification for men who have sex with men: Current effectiveness and
impediments in eight cities. National HIV Prevention Conference.
Hogben, Wimberly, et al. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guideline dissemination and use
by US physicians. International Society for STD Research.
Hogben, Liddon, et al. Risky sexual behavior and attachment style. International Society for STD
Research.
Liddon, Hogben, et al. Reasons for having sex: A qualitative study of adolescent females at a pediatric
clinic. International Society for STD Research.
Golden, Brewer, Hogben, et al. Community-wide implementation of expedited partner therapy (EPT) for
gonorrhea and chlamydial infection. International Society for STD Research.
Hogben CV
15
Schwartz RM, Malka ES, Williams J, Cintron, Liddon, Hogben, et al. Predictors of partner notification
for C. trachomatis and N. gonorrhoeae: An examination of social, cognitive, and psychological factors.
International Society for STD Research.
*Hogben M, Liddon N. Disinhibition applied to sexual behavior as a function of interventions.
American Public Health Association.
Liddon, Hogben, et al. Reasons adolescent females give for having sex and their correlations with
condom use. American Public Health Association.
2006
*Hogben, et al. Guidance and next steps for expedited partner therapy. National STD Conference
(symposium).
Wimberly, Moore, Hogben, et al. Effect of a sexuality module on knowledge of students in a school of
medicine. National STD Conference.
Wimberly, Hogben, et al. Sexual history-taking practices among Atlanta-area physicians in primary
care. National STD Conference.
Wilson, Augenbraun, Binger, Cintron, Curney, Hogben, et al. STD Partner Notification Rates among
African American- and Caribbean- Identified Men and Women with C trachomatis or N gonorrhoeae.
XV International AIDS Congress.
2007
*Hogben, Chesson, Aral. Sexuality education policy and gonorrhea rates. International Society for STD
Research.
*Habel, Hogben. Public health guidance dissemination via the internet: Expedited partner therapy.
International Society for STD Research.
Schwartz, Augenbraun, Hogben, et al. Coping with a diagnosis of C trachomatis or N gonorrhoeae:
Psychosocial and behavioral correlates. International Society for STD Research.
Pulver, Hogben, Hodge. Policy initiative to support local implementation of a recommended clinical
practice: Case study of implementation of expedited partner therapy. International Society for STD
Research.
Golden, Brewer, Hogben, et al. Advanced provision of emergency contraception among women receiving
partner notification services for gonorrhea and chlamydial infection: a randomized controlled trial and
meta-analysis. International Society for STD Research.
Wilson, Hogben, Malka, et al. Reducing sexually transmitted infection rates by improving patient-based
partner notification for treatment: A randomized controlled trial. International Society for STD
Research.
Hogben CV
16
Wimberly, Callins, Hogben, Moore. Awareness and prevalence of herpes simplex virus in a primary care
practice. International Society for STD Research.
2008
*Hogben. Recommendations for integrated HIV/STD partner services. National STD Conference.
Hoover, Friedman, Montano, Kasprzyk, Hogben. Human papillomavirus infection and partner
notification: How providers handle referral instructions. National STD Conference.
*Hogben. Workshop on integrated partner services recommendations. HIV Prevention Leadership
Summit.
*Hogben, Viall, Getty. Integrated partner services for HIV and other STD. US Conference on AIDS.
*Hogben. Expedited partner therapy: background and legal ramifications. American Public Health
Association Conference.
Invited Talks, Consultations, and Symposia:
Rutgers University (Newark), March 1999.
Infertility Prevention Project Coordinators’ Meeting, October 2001.
Region VII Infertility Prevention Project Annual Meeting, March 2003.
Region I Infertility Prevention Project Annual Meeting, October 2003.
American Public Health Association (symposium moderator), November 2003.
National Coalition of STD Clinic Directors, October 2004.
Infertility Prevention Project Coordinators’ Meeting, September 2004.
Expedited Partner Therapy review of evidence (chair and presenter), October, 2004
American Public Health Association (symposium moderator), November 2004.
Expedited Partner Therapy implementation meeting (co-chair and presenter), March 2005.
Region VI Infertility Prevention Project Annual Meeting, May 2005.
American Public Health Association (symposium moderator), November 2005.
Male Chlamydia Screening, March 2006.
Region IX Infertility Prevention Project Annual Meeting, June 2006.
New Hampshire Department of Health and Human Services, July 2006.
Missouri Department of Health and Human Services, August 2006.
American Public Health Association (symposium moderator), November 2006.
Region III Infertility Prevention Project, February 2007.
National Prevention Training Centers meeting, April 2007.
International Society for STD Research (symposium moderator), July 2007.
American Public Health Association (symposium moderator), November 2007.
California State HIV/STD Directors meeting, December, 2007.
National STD Conference (symposium moderator), March, 2008.
National Coalition of STD Program Directors. October, 2008.
American Public Health Association (symposium moderator), October 2008.
Ohio Department of Health (World AIDS Day), December, 2008.
Family Planning Male Training Centers (plenary and workshop), May, 2009.
Hogben CV
17
Reviewer Activities
Journals:
AIDS & Behavior
American Journal of Preventive Medicine
American Journal of Public Health
Annals of Family Medicine
Basic and Applied Social Psychology
BMJ (British Medical Journal)
BMJ Student
Clinical Infectious Diseases
Contemporary Psychology
Indian Journal of Medical Research
International Journal of Nursing Studies
Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes
Journal of Adolescence
Journal of the National Medical Association
Journal of Sex Research
Journal of Women’s Health
Pediatrics
Perceptual and Motor Skills/Psychological Reports
Perspectives on Sexual and Reproductive Health
Psychology, Health, & Medicine
Sex Roles: A Journal of Research
Sexual Health
Sexually Transmitted Diseases (Editorial board member)
Sexually Transmitted Infections
Vulnerable Children and Youth
Women & Health
Women’s Health & Urban Life
National Institutes of Health, Center for Scientific Review, 2005 – 2007.
Special Emphasis Panel, HIV/AIDS Behavioral section (ZRG1 AARR-A, Srinivas)
American Public Health Association, Community Health Promotion and Policy Development, 2003 –
present.
Steering Committee, development of call for abstracts, abstract reviews, symposium moderator
(Gorbach/Grant)
Additional Information
Additional scholarly productivity:
Hogben, M. (1993). Test bank (for R.A. Baron & D. Byrne, Social psychology: Understanding human
interaction, 7th Ed.). Boston: Allyn & Bacon.
Reviews for various textbook publishers (Human Sexuality, Social Psychology, Introductory Psychology)
Hogben CV
18
Teaching Experience and Graduate Committee work:
State University of New York, Albany, NY (all junior-level unless otherwise noted): 1994 – 1996
Psychology of Human Sexuality (taught three times)
Abnormal Psychology
Child Development
Statistics (PSY 210)
Social Psychology (taught twice)
Oglethorpe University, Atlanta, GA: 2001 – 2006 (adjunct)
Social Psychology (PSY 2870, taught three times)
Tests and Measurements (PSY 3840, taught twice)
Principles of Psychology (PSY 1740, taught four times)
Masters in Public Health, committee member:
Lauri Howard, Emory University, Atlanta, USA, 2002
Tricia Hall, Emory University, Atlanta, USA, 2003
Masters in Psychology, committee member:
Brett Ginter, Trinity Western University, Alberta, Canada, 2004
Professional Memberships:
American Sexually Transmitted Disease Association
American Public Health Association
International Union against Sexually Transmitted Infections
Society for Personality and Social Psychology
Current Collaborative Partnerships (not previously noted):
State of Washington: Community-level trial of expedited partner therapy implementation (NIH-funded
trial, steering committee member).
University of South Florida, risk reduction and health care access interventions for youth (NIH
application, in-kind consultant).
Emory University, mental health and health care use by Black men in Georgia (NIH application, in-kind
consultant).
Erie County, NY/Society for Adolescent Medicine: Application of expedited partner therapy for
adolescents (co-authored papers, advice on position statements).
Download