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Kathy J. Goggin, Ph.D

 

Associate Professor
Director, HIV/AIDS Research Group
Department of Psychology
University of Missouri-Kansas City
4825 Troost Street, Suite.111-D
Kansas City, Missouri 64110-2499

Email:  goggink@umkc.edu

 
 

 

Education

Postdoctoral Training in HIV/AIDS
Aaron Diamond Foundation
New York State Psychiatric Institute & Cornell University Medical College

1995 – 1997
Chief Fellow, NIMH Postdoctoral Research Training Program in HIV/AIDS
New York Hospital / Cornell University Medical College & Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

1994 – 1995
Doctorate, Clinical Psychology with specialty in Behavioral Medicine
San Diego State University / University of California, San Diego Joint Doctoral Program in Clinical Psychology (APA approved)

1994
Bachelor of Arts, Psychology, Summa Cum Laude
California State University, Dominguez Hills, Los Angeles, CA
1989

                                                                                                                                   

Publications

 

Research Interests

  • HIV/AIDS
  • Adjustment to chronic/terminal disease
  • Adherence to medical regime
  • Primary and secondary prevention in HIV and substance use/abuse
  • Health promotion in communities of color
  • Protective factors (e.g., autonomous regulation, spirituality, self- efficacy) in health decision making
  • MOTIV8 Adherence Project

     

    Current Funded Projects

    Principal Investigator, NIH/NIMH, RO1 MH68197, ART Adherence: Enhanced Counseling and Observed Therapy, Jan 2004 – Dec 2008, $3,335,681.
    Major Goal(s): This 5 year randomized controlled trial will assign HIV+ patients to enhanced counseling with observed therapy, enhanced counseling alone, or standard care with assessments conducted at baseline, 3, 6, and 12 months, and the primary test of adherence and secondary outcome of viral load assessed at 1 year. Goal is to determine whether enhanced counseling combined with observed therapy is more effective than enhanced counseling alone or standard care in increasing adherence to ART and/or decreasing viral load.

    Mentor (PI: Berkley-Patton), NIH/NIMH, Supplement to Promote Diversity in Health Related Research Sept 5 – Dec 2008, $356,398

    Major Goal(s):  1) to develop and coordinate a Community Advisory Boardcomprised of HIV+ individuals, affected family members, HIV care providers, and community leaders, 2) to translate evidence-based adherence innovations identified by the project into appropriately applied practices for HIV/AIDS healthcare practitioners, patients and systems, and 3) to identify and describe successful process for translating evidence-based innovations into practice.

    Co-Investigator (PI: Liu), NIH/NIMH, R01 MH078773, Multi-Site Collaborative Study for Adherence, Virologic andClinical Outcome, Aug 2007 – July 2012, $3,475,138.

    Major Goal(s): This multi-site collaborative study integrates medication adherence data with patient demographic, psychosocial characteristics and behavioral, virologic and clinical outcomes data collected from 2,830 individuals across 15 studies from 13 major institutions. The goals are to: 1) create a powerful data source to address questions that cannot be answered with any single data set; 2) create and validate adherence measures that can characterize multi-faceted adherence behavior fully, objectively and accurately; 3) study the patterns and determinants of adherence to antiretroviral medications and evaluate the effectiveness of interventions with the large, diverse HIV+ populations; and 4) model virologic outcomes, clinical events, disease progression and death as functions of adherence to antiretroviral medications, and patient, medication and regimen characteristics over time.

    Mentor (PI: Paul), NIH/NIMH, K23MH65857, Improving adherence to HAART in HIV, Dec 2002 – Dec 2007, $725,000.

    Major Goal(s): This Mentored Patient-Oriented Research Career Award (K23) provides support for Dr. Robert Paul to obtain the requisite training and expertise to investigate treatment outcome in patients infected with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV).

    Co-Investigator (PI: Folk), NIH/NCCAM, U19 AT003264, TICIPS: HIV/AIDS, Secondary Infections and Immune Modulation, Sept 2005 – Aug 2009, $4.4m

    Major goals of The International Center for Indigenous Phytotherapy Studies (TICIPS) are to: a)create a collaborative environment to support scientifically rigorous and ethical studies of African phytotherapies and healthcare systems; b) train scientists to conduct high caliber research in complementary and alternative medical practices (CAM); c) communicate evidence for the safety and efficacy of indigenous phytotherapies and CAM to healthcare providers and the public; d) advance the health and well-being of the African and American peoples. Dr. Goggin is Co-Leader of Research Project I which is a randomized double blind placebo controlled study to investigate the safety and efficacy of Lessertia frutescens in HIV-infected South Africans. The goals of this study are to: 1) determine the safety of Lessertia frutescens when used by HIV-1 infected adults with early disease, 2) determine the effect of Lessertia frutescens on secondary [quality of life in HIV-infected adults measured by the Medical Outcomes Study HIV Health Survey (MOS-HIV)] and Tertiary (length of common infection) outcomes, and 3) document the impact of Lessertia frutescens on markers of HIV disease progression.

    Current Student Research Projects

    Martinez, D., Goggin, K., Catley, D., Gerkovich M., Pinkston, M., Thomson D., Bradley-Ewing A., Carruth T., Williams, K., Wright, J., Berkley-Patton J., Kakolewski, K. & Clark, K. (2007). Coping differences related to age, education, and substance use among HIV+ patients on ART. Poster submitted to the 29th Annual Meeting of the Society of Behavioral Medicine, San Diego, CA.

    Pinkston, M., Goggin, K., Clark, K., Wright, J., Carruth T., Gerkovich M., & Williams, K. (2007). Sometimes a Jelly Bean isn’t just a Jelly Bean: Increasing empathy in medical students. Poster submitted to the 29th Annual Meeting of the Society of Behavioral Medicine, San Diego, CA.

    Clark, K., Pinkston, M., Goggin, K., Carruth, T., Bingham, C., Lipari, J., & Martinez, D. (2007). Sexual health messages in women’s magazines. Poster submitted to the 29th Annual Meeting of the Society of Behavioral Medicine, San Diego, CA.

    Liston, R. J., Goggin, K., & Mitty, J. A.  (2007, Mar). Bridging the Research to Practice Gap: A Primer for Adapting Modified Directly Observed Therapy for ART. Paper presented at the 28th Annual Meeting of the Society of Behavioral Medicine, Washington, DC.

    Pinkston, M. M., Bradley-Ewing, A., Malomo, D., & Goggin, K. J.  (2007, Mar). A Qualitative Examination of the Indirect Effects of Modified Directly Observed Therapy on Health Behaviors Other than Adherence. Poster presented at the 28th Annual Meeting of the Society of Behavioral Medicine, Washington, DC.

    Lynam, L., Catley, D., Goggin, K., Gerkovich, M., Williams, K., & Wright, J. (2007, Mar). Autonomous Regulation and Locus of Control as Predictors of Antiretroviral Medication Adherence. Poster presented at the 28th Annual Meeting of the Society of Behavioral Medicine, Washington, DC.

    McInerney, E. M., & Goggin, K. (2007, Mar). Relationship between Parental Loss and Adolescent Sexual Risk Behavior. Poster presented at the 28th Annual Meeting of the Society of Behavioral Medicine, Washington, DC.

    Pinkston, M. M., Gerkovich, M. M., Goggin, K., & Woods, B. (2007, Mar). Examining the Perceived Risks and Benefits of Alcohol Use Among African American Adolescents. Poster presented at the 28th Annual Meeting of the Society of Behavioral Medicine, Washington, DC.

    Liston, R.J., Berkley-Patton, J., & Goggin, K. (2006, Nov). Tell me a story: Using role model stories to promote use of HIV/AIDS prevention and care services. Poster presented at the 134th annual meeting of the American Public Health Association, Boston, MA.

    Bradley-Ewing, A., & Goggin, K. (2006, Nov). Making it click: Seat belt use among young African Americans. Paper presented at the 134th annual meeting of the American Public Health Association, Boston, MA.

    Kennedy, S., Goggin, K., & Wise, D. (2006, Mar). Predictors of sexual risk behaviors among African-American adolescents: A meta-analysis. Poster presented at the 27th Annual Meeting of the Society of Behavioral Medicine, San Francisco, CA.


    Last updated: Jan 09, 2008

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