Topic
- addiction
- adrenal cancer
- alcohol
- Alzheimer's
- asthma
- biobank
- breast cancer
- cancer
- cessation
- chemotherapy
- colorectal cancer
- diabetes
- disease management
- gastrointestinal illness
- genetics
- health insurance
- hearing loss
- hearing protection
- heart disease
- HIV / AIDS
- HPV
- injury
- liver
- lung cancer
- medical history
- medication adherence
- mental health
- nutrition
- obesity
- oral health
- organ donation
- organ quality
- organ transplant
- other
- ovarian cancer
- physical activity
- post-treatment
- prevention
- prostate cancer
- quality of life
- recurrence
- screening
- skin cancer
- sleep safety
- smoking
- STD
- stroke
- survivorship
- symptoms
- treatment
- vaccination
- weight loss
Audience
- adolescents
- adults
- African Americans
- alumni
- caregivers
- children
- college students
- farmers
- fraternities and sororities
- girls
- health care providers
- high risk
- HMO members
- Latinos
- LGBT
- Medicare enrollees
- men
- mothers
- non-smokers
- older adults
- parents
- patients
- people living with HIV/AIDS
- research volunteers
- school age children
- smokers
- survivors
- transplant recipients
- transplant waiting list
- underserved
- veterans
- women
- young adults
Setting
Technology
Email: kresnic@umich.edu
2800 Plymouth Road, Building 16
Ann Arbor, MI 48109-2800
Affiliations
- Center for Health Communications Research (Investigator)
- University of Michigan School of Public Health (Professor, Health Behavior & Health Education)
- University of Michigan Comprehensive Cancer Center (Director of Health Disparities Research)
Kenneth A. Resnicow, PhD
Ken Resnicow, PhD, is the Irwin M. Rosenstock Collegiate Professor of Public Health in the Health Behavior and Health Education department of the University of Michigan School of Public Health, Cancer Center Director of Health Disparities Research, and a senior
leader at the CHCR.
Dr. Resnicow is an internationally recognized expert in design and evaluation of health promotion interventions and motivational interviewing (MI), and is a leading expert in conceptualizing and designing culturally sensitive community-based interventions for health promotion. He is also an expert in community-based interventions for nutrition, physical activity, and smoking prevention in minorities.
Dr. Resnicow specializes in theory-based tailoring including ethnic identity and self-determination theory. His research interests include the design and evaluation of health promotion programs for special populations, particularly cardiovascular and cancer prevention interventions for African Americans; understanding the relationship between ethnicity and health behaviors; and motivational interviewing for chronic disease prevention. He has worked extensively with numerous universities, research and practitioner groups worldwide as well as health voluntary (e.g., American Cancer Society, American Dietetics Association, Academy of Pediatrics) and government agencies, including NIH and CDC.
Associated Projects (13) +
- MENU GenY (2011)
- Take the Pledge: Organ Donation (2010)
- Healthy Moms/Healthy Daughters (2010)
- Inside Health (2008)
- Breathe New York (2008)
- CECCR2 - Center of Excellence In Cancer Communications Research II (2008)
- The RealU (2007)
- Childhood Obesity MI for Pediatricians (2007)
- Puff City II (2007)
- BMi2 (2007)
- Tools for Being a Helpful Peer Partner - DVD (2006)
- CECCR - Center of Excellence in Cancer Communications Research (2003)
- Eat for Life (2003)
Associated Publications (21) +
- Randomized controlled effectiveness trial of reciprocal peer support in heart failure (2013)
- Ethnic Identity, Questionnaire Content, and the Dilemma of Race Matching in Surveys of African Americans by African American Interviewers (2012)
- A Picture May be Worth a Thousand Words: Obese Adolescents' Perspectives on a Modified Photovoice Activity to Aid Weight Loss (2012)
- Study design and baseline description of the BMI2 trial: reducing paediatric obesity in primary care practices (2012)
- Survey Response Styles, Acculturation, and Culture Among a Sample of Mexican American Adults (2011)
- OMG do not say LOL: obese adolescents' perspectives on the content of text messages to enhance weight loss efforts (2011)
- Pushing the envelope for cultural appropriateness: does evidence support cultural tailoring in type 2 diabetes interventions for Mexican American adults? (2011)
- Feasibility of using maternal cancer screening visits to identify adolescent girls eligible for human papillomavirus vaccination (2010)
- Tailored mobile phone text messages as an adjunct to obesity treatment for adolescents (2010)
- A new audience segmentation tool for African Americans: the black identity classification scale (2010)
- Factors associated with nonresponse to a computer-tailored asthma management program for urban adolescents with asthma (2010)
- Ethnic Identity predicts loss-to-follow-up in a health promotion trial (2010)
- Methodologic and design issues in patient-centered e-health research (2010)
- A randomized clinical trial evaluating online interventions to improve fruit and vegetable consumption (2009)
- Interviewer effects in public health surveys (2009)
- Challenges in researching racially sensitive topics in HMOs (2009)
- Tailoring a fruit and vegetable intervention on ethnic identity: results of a randomized study (2009)
- Screening experiments and the use of fractional factorial designs in behavioral intervention research (2008)
- Psychosocial predictors of fruit and vegetable consumption in adults a review of the literature (2008)
- Tailoring a fruit and vegetable intervention on novel motivational constructs: results of a randomized study (2008)
- Understanding tailoring in communicating about health (2008)
CHCR Seminars (7) +
- Motivational Interviewing in Medical and Public Health Settings
- Cultural Sensitivity in Public Health
- Eat for Life Psychometric Pilot Results: African American Ethnic Profiles
- Results From the "Eat for Life" Motivational Predisposition Study
- Center of Excellence in Cancer Communications Research (CECCR) - Research Presentations
- BMI2: Brief Motivational Interviewing to reduce BMI
- Chaos Theory and Epiphany in Health Behavior Change

