Robyn Gershon
Robyn Gershon
Clinical Professor of Epidemiology
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Professional overview
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Dr. Gershon is an interdisciplinary occupational and environmental health and safety researcher with extensive experience in the areas of disaster preparedness, healthcare safety, and risk assessment and management in high-risk work occupations. She earned her doctorate in Public Health from Johns Hopkins University, School of Public Health, where she was on faculty for several years.
Subsequently, Dr. Gershon was a Professor at the Mailman School of Public Health at Columbia University, with a joint appointment in the School of Nursing.
At the Mailman School, she also served as the Associate Dean for Research and was the Director of the Mentoring Program. Her most recent faculty appointment prior to joining NYU GPH was Professor of Epidemiology and Biostatistics and the Philip R. Lee Institute for Health Policy Studies at University of California, San Francisco (UCSF). She was also an Adjunct Professor in the UCSF School of Nursing, as well as at UC Berkeley where she taught public health disaster courses.
Dr. Gershon and her team conducted numerous ground breaking studies to develop and test new metrics of preparedness. Importantly, Dr. Gershon’s work has influenced the adoption of safe work practices and regulatory control measures, such as national needlestick prevention guidelines and high-rise building fire safety laws. Her numerous research studies encompass a wide range of topics, including, (to name a few): bloodborne pathogen exposure; hospital safety climate; psychosocial work stress in law enforcement; “ability and willingness” of essential workforce employees to report to duty during natural and man-made disasters; preparedness of responders for terrorist incidents; emergency high–rise building evacuation- (including the World Trade Center Evacuation Study); emergency preparedness of the elderly and disabled; mass fatality management infrastructure in the US; adherence to emergency public health measures among the general public; hearing loss risk in subway ridership; and noise exposure in urban populations.
Dr. Gershon recently completed a four-year, longitudinal intervention NIH-funded study on motivation and persistence in pursuing STEM research careers among underrepresented doctoral students. (the BRIDGE Project).
As a committed advocate for junior faculty and graduate students, Dr. Gershon will play an active role in research mentorship and advisement.
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Education
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BS, Medical Technology, Quinnipiac University, Hamden, CTMHS, Medical Microbiology, Quinnipiac University, Hamden, CTDrPH, Environmental and Occupational Health, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD
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Honors and awards
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Recipient, American Society of Safety Engineers, Membership Award, Oakland, CA (2016)Recipient, John L. Ziegler Capstone Mentor Award, Global Health Sciences, University of California San Francisco (2015)Recipient, City of New York Fire Commissioner's Special Commendation Certificate of Appreciation (2006)Recipient, Survivors' Salute, World Trade Center Survivors' Network (2006)Recipient, Annual International Sharps Injury Prevention Award (2005)Delta Omega (Public Health) Honorary Society (1997)Phi Theta Kappa Honor Society (Microbiology) (1976)Lambda Tau Mu Honor Society (Laboratory Science) (1976)
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Areas of research and study
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Disaster HealthDisaster Impact and RecoveryDisaster PreparednessEnvironmental Public Health ServicesEpidemiologyHealthcare SafetyOccupational HealthRisk Assessment and Management
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Publications
Publications
Pilot survey of subway and bus stop noise levels
Failed retrieving data.Erratum : Reports of intimate partner violence made against police officers (Journal of Family Violence (Febuary 2005) 20:1 (1-54))
Failed retrieving data.Health and safety hazards associated with subways : A review
Failed retrieving data.Health care workers' ability and willingness to report to duty during catastrophic disasters
Failed retrieving data.Hepatitis B vaccination in correctional health care workers
Failed retrieving data.Public transportation : Advantages and challenges
Failed retrieving data.Reports of intimate partner violence made against police officers
Failed retrieving data.Risk of tuberculosis in correctional healthcare workers
Failed retrieving data.Clinicians' Knowledge, Attitudes, and Concerns Regarding Bioterrorism after a Brief Educational Program
Failed retrieving data.Effectiveness of an emergency preparedness training program for public health nurses in New York City
Failed retrieving data.Job loss, unemployment, work stress, job satisfaction, and the persistence of posttraumatic stress disorder one year after the september 11 attacks
Failed retrieving data.Measurement of Organizational Culture and Climate in Healthcare
Failed retrieving data.Preliminary results from the World Trade Center evacuation study-New York City
Failed retrieving data.Safety climate: assessing management and organizational influences on safety
Failed retrieving data.Terrorism preparedness training for occupational health professionals
Failed retrieving data.Bloodborne pathogen exposure risk for non-hospital based healthcare workers
Failed retrieving data.Emergency preparedness training for public health nurses : A pilot study
Failed retrieving data.Infectious disease risk in correctional facility-based healthcare workers
Failed retrieving data.Prevalence of safer needle devices and factors associated with their adoption : Results of a National Hospital Survey
Failed retrieving data.Work stress in aging police officers
Failed retrieving data.Infection control practices among correctional healthcare workers : Effect of management attitudes and availability of protective equipment and engineering controls
Failed retrieving data.Psychosocial work stress in female funeral service parctitioners
Failed retrieving data.The risk of acquiring hepatitis B or C among public safety workers. A systematic review
Failed retrieving data.Behavioral-diagnostic analysis of compliance with universal precautions among nurses.
Failed retrieving data.Factors affecting universal precautions compliance
Failed retrieving data.