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Cheryl Healton

Cheryl Healton

Cheryl Healton

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Founding Dean of School of Global Public Health

Professor of Public Health Policy and Management

Professional overview

For the last ten years, Dean Healton has devoted herself to building GPH’s academic, service, and research programs. The School has been accredited by CEPH, increased the size of its student body and research funding, recruited top faculty, added doctoral-level programs, and made diversity, equity and inclusion a priority.

Previously, as the founding President and CEO of Legacy, a leading organization dedicated to tobacco control, Dean Healton guided the national youth tobacco prevention campaign, which has been credited with reducing youth smoking prevalence to record lows, and launched programs for smoking cessation, public education, technical assistance, and a broad range of grant making.

Prior to joining Legacy, Dean Healton held numerous roles at Columbia University including Associate Dean of its Medical School, Assistant Vice President for the Health Sciences and Chairman of Sociomedical Sciences, and Associate Dean of the Mailman School of Public Health. She is an Emeritus Professor of Columbia University.

Dean Healton has authored over 120 peer-reviewed articles and has been awarded multiple grants in AIDS, tobacco control and higher education. She was the founding chair of the Public Health Practice Council of the Association of Schools of Public Health. As an active member of the public health community she has given presentations around the world and is a frequent contributor to national and local coverage of public health issues.

She holds a DrPH from Columbia University's School of Public Health (with distinction) and a Master’s in Public Administration from the Robert F. Wagner Graduate School of Public Service at NYU.

Education

MPA, Health Policy and Planning, New York University, New York, NY
DrPH, Sociomedical Sciences (with distinction), Columbia University, New York, NY

Areas of research and study

Public Health Law
Public Health Policy
Tobacco Control

Publications

Publications

Smoking, obesity, and their co-occurrence in the United States : Cross sectional analysis

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Televised movie trailers : Undermining restrictions on advertising tobacco to youth

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Youth smoking prevention and tobacco industry revenue

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Youth tobacco surveillance--United States, 2001-2002.

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Carson's Legacy

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Comparing adolescent reactions to national tobacco countermarketing advertisements using Web TV

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Evidence of a dose-response relationship between "truth" antismoking ads and youth smoking prevalence

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Flavored Tobacco Products

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Foreword

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Physician and dentist tobacco use counseling and adolescent smoking behavior : Results from the 2000 National Youth Tobacco Survey

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truth

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Giving infants a Great Start : Launching a national smoking cessation program for pregnant women

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Preventing 3 Million Premature Deaths and Helping 5 Million Smokers Quit : A National Action Plan for Tobacco Cessation

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Reversal of Misfortune : Viewing Tobacco as a Social Justice Issue

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Will the master settlement agreement achieve a lasting legacy?

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Courage and dignity.

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Erratum : Getting to the truth: Evaluating national tobacco countermarketing campaigns (American Journal of Public Health (2002) 92 (901-907))

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Forward: Selections from the American Journal of Public Health

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Obesity and Tobacco

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Smoking in the Movies

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Tobacco Use Among Middle and High School Students – United States, 2002

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Getting to the truth : Evaluating national tobacco countermarketing campaigns

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Speaking truth(sm) to youth. How the American Legacy Foundation is helping teens reject tobacco.

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Controlling tobacco use [3] (multiple letters)

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Erratum : Who's afraid of the truth? (American Journal of Public Health (2001) 91 (554-558))

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Contact

cheryl.healton@nyu.edu 708 Broadway New York, NY, 10003