
Curriculum Vitae Christine A. Bevc Epidemiologist Research Associate North Carolina Institute for Public Health UNC Gillings School of Global Public Health University of North Carolina – Chapel Hill CB #8165 Chapel Hill, NC 27599-8165 Office: (919) 338-2552 Cell: (720) 560-3125 [email protected] Education 2010 Ph.D. Sociology University of Colorado at Boulder Concentration: Environmental Sociology/Hazards and Disasters Dissertation: “Working on the Edge: Examining Covariates in Multi- Organizational Networks on September 11th Attacks on the World Trade Center” Chair: Kathleen J. Tierney, Ph.D. 2004 M.A. Applied Sociology University of Central Florida Thesis: “Exposure Matters: Examining the Physical and Psychological Health Impacts of Toxic Contamination using GIS and Survey Data” Chair: Brent K Marshall, Ph.D. 2002 B.S. Liberal Studies Triple Minor: Sociology University of Central Florida Environmental Studies Health Sciences Areas of Specialization Public Health Preparedness Qualitative/Quantitative Research Methods Public Health Systems Research Social Network Analysis Organizational Behavior Sociology of Disasters Professional Experience 2010 – Present Epidemiologist Research Associate, UNC Center for Public Health Preparedness, North Carolina Institute for Public Health, UNC Gillings School of Global Public Health, University of North Carolina – Chapel Hill. 2014-Present “North Carolina Preparedness and Emergency Response Learning Center (PERLC).” CDC Grant No. 1U90TP000415. 2014-Present “Evaluation of Host Organizational Network using Social Network Analysis.” UNC Morehead Science Center and Planetarium. Cross- University Collaborative Project. 2010-2014 “North Carolina Preparedness and Emergency Response Research Center (PERRC).” CDC Grant No. 1PO15TP000296. Project Lead. “Expansion of the Vulnerable and At-Risk Populations Resource Guide.” Co-Investigator. “Effects of Accreditation on Local Public Health Preparedness.” Accreditation Project.” 2010-2011 “Assessment of Potassium Iodide (KI) Distribution and Education among Communities within the 10 mile Emergency Planning Zone (EPZ) of a Nuclear Power Plant in North Carolina” North Carolina Division of Public Health, Office of Public Health Preparedness and Response, Contract No. 02079-10 2014 Adjunct Assistant Professor, Department of Behavioral & Social Sciences, Webster University. Course Taught: Introduction to Sociology (SOCI 1100). 2011 – 2013 Research Associate, MEASURE Evaluation, Carolina Population Center, University of North Carolina – Chapel Hill. 2011-2015 “Assessing HIV and Family Planning Organizational Networks to Improve Integration and Health Outcomes in Ethiopia.” U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) Cooperative Agreement No. GHA- A-00-08-00003-00. 2006 Graduate Part-Time Instructor, Department of Sociology, University of Colorado at Boulder. Course taught: Environment and Society (SOCY 2077). 2005 - 2010 Graduate Research Assistant. Natural Hazards Center, Environment Program, Institute of Behavioral Science. University of Colorado at Boulder. 2006 – 2009 “Community Field Studies and Analyses of Preparedness Networks.” Working Group 3 Societal Dimensions of Terrorism, Study of Terrorism and the Response to Terrorism (START), DHS Grant No. Z988503. 2007 – 2008 “Disaster Preparedness Among Community-Based Organizations in the City and County of San Francisco.” Bay Area Preparedness Initiative (BAPI), Fritz Institute. 2004 – 2008 “WTC Emergent Multiorganizational Network.” Responding to Crises and Unexpected Events (RESCUE), NSF Grant 0331690 /0331707. 2004 – 2008 “Policy Information Sharing Architecture – Train Derailment Disaster Scenario.” Responding to Crises and Unexpected Events (RESCUE), NSF Grant 0331690 /0331707. 2004 Graduate Teaching Assistant (Liam Downey, Ph.D.). Introduction to Sociology, Department of Sociology, University of Colorado at Boulder. 2002 - 2004 Graduate Research Assistant (Brent K Marshall, Ph.D.). Department of Sociology & Anthropology. University of Central Florida. Peer-Reviewed Publications James C. Thomas. Heidi Reynolds, Christine A. Bevc, Ademe Tsegaye. “Finding Missed Opportunities: A Network Approach to Service Coordination and Integration.” Health Policy and Planning, forthcoming - Advance Access available. Bevc 2 of 19 April 2016 2015 Christine A. Bevc, Jessica H. Retrum, Danielle M. Varda. “Patterns in PARTNERing across Public Health Collaboratives.” International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, forthcoming. 2015 Christine A. Bevc, Mary V. Davis, and Anna P. Schenck. “Measuring Changes in Local Surveillance and Investigation Capacity.” Frontiers in Public Health Systems and Services Research, 4(4). 2015 Christine A. Bevc, Jessica Retrum, and Danielle Varda. “New Perspectives on the “Silo Effect” – Initial Comparisons of Network Structures across Public Health Collaboratives.” American Journal of Public Health, 105(s2):S230-S235. 2014 Christine A. Bevc, Matthew C. Simon, Tanya Montoya, and Jennifer A. Horney. “Institutional Facilitators and Barriers to Local Public Health Preparedness Planning for Vulnerable and At- Risk Populations.” Public Health Reports, 129(s4):35-41. 2014 Mary V. Davis, Christine A. Bevc, and Anna P. Schenck. “Effects of Performance Improvement Programs on Preparedness Capacities.” Public Health Reports, 129(s4):19-27. 2014 Mary V. Davis, Christine A. Bevc, and Anna P. Schenck. “Declining Trends in Local Health Department Preparedness Capacities.” American Journal of Public Health, 104(11):2233-2238. 2014 Christine A. Bevc, Mary V. Davis, and Anna P. Schenck. “Temporal Trends in Local Public Health Preparedness Capacity.” Frontiers in Public Health Systems & Services Research, 3(3). http://uknowledge.uky.edu/frontiersinphssr/vol3/iss3/3/ 2014 Christa-Marie Singleton, Liza Corso, Deborah Koester, Valeria Carlson, Christine A. Bevc, Mary Davis. “Accreditation and Emergency Preparedness: Linkages and Opportunities for Leveraging the Connections.” Journal of Public Health Management and Practice, 20(1):119-24. 2014 Thomas JC, Reynolds H, Bevc CA, Tsegaye A. “Integration opportunities for HIV and family planning services in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia: An organizational network analysis.” BMC Health Services Research, 2014, 14:22. 2013 Mary V. Davis, Glen P. Mays, James Bellamy, Christine A. Bevc, Cammi Marti. “Improving public health preparedness capacity measurement: development of the local health department preparedness capacities assessment survey.” Disaster Medicine and Public Health Preparedness, 7(6):578-84. 2013 Nadya Belenky, Christine A. Bevc, Elizabeth Mahanna, Carol Gunther-Mohr, and Mary V. Davis. “Evaluating Use of Custom Survey Reports by Local Health Departments.” Frontiers in Public Health Services and Systems Research, 2(6): Article 4. 2013 Richard R. Rosselli, Christine A. Bevc, Matthew C. Simon, Julie Casani, and Pia D.M. MacDonald. “Residential Household Knowledge and Receipt of Potassium Iodide within the 10- Mile Emergency Planning Zone of a Nuclear Power Plant in North Carolina, 2010.” International Journal of Mass Emergencies and Disasters, 31(2). 2013 Nnenia Campbell, Christine A. Bevc, and J. Steven Picou. “Perceptions of Toxic Exposure: Considering the ‘White Male’ and ‘Black Female’ Effects.” Sociological Spectrum, 33:313-328. 2012 Christine A. Bevc, Milissa L. Markiewicz, Jennifer Hegle, Jennifer A. Horney, and Pia D.M. MacDonald. “Assessing the Roles of Brokerage: An Evaluation of a Hospital-based Public Health Epidemiologist Program in North Carolina.” Journal of Public Health Management and Practice, Special Issue: Advancing the Science of Practice: Public Health Services and Systems Research, 18(6):577-584. Bevc 3 of 19 April 2016 2012 Christopher Steven Marcum, Christine A. Bevc, and Carter T. Butts. “Mechanisms of Control in Emergent Interorganizational Networks.” Policy Studies Journal, 40(3):516-546. http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1541-0072.2012.00463.x/abstract 2012 Milissa L. Markiewicz, Christine A. Bevc, Jennifer Hegle, Jennifer A. Horney, Megan Davies, and Pia D.M. MacDonald. “Linking Public Health Agencies and Hospitals for Improved Emergency Preparedness: North Carolina’s Public Health Epidemiologist Program.” BMC Public Health, 12(141). http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2458/12/141/abstract 2010 Christine A. Bevc. “Considering the Emotional Dimensions of Conducting Research in Disaster Settings.” The Journal of Applied Social Science, 4(Fall). 2009 Christine A. Bevc, Ashly N. Barlau, and Nick Passanante. “Mapping Convergence Points in the Initial Emergency Response to 9/11.” Disasters: The Journal of Disaster Studies, Policy and Management, 33(4):786-808. http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/cgi-bin/fulltext/122373783/PDFSTART 2007 Christine A. Bevc, Brent K. Marshall and J. Steven Picou. “Environmental Justice and Toxic Exposure: Toward a Socio-Spatial Model of Physical Health and Psychological Well-Being.” Social Science Research Journal, 36(1):48-67. http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/0049089X 2006 Kathleen Tierney, Christine Bevc, and Erica Kuligowski. "Metaphors Matter: Disaster Myths, Media Frames, and Their Consequences." The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Sciences, 604:57-81. http://ann.sagepub.com/cgi/reprint/604/1/57 2005 Brent K. Marshall, J. Steven Picou, and Christine A. Bevc. “Ecological Disaster as Contextual Transformation: Environmental Values in a Renewable Resource Community.” Environment and Behavior, 37(5):706-728. http://eab.sagepub.com/cgi/reprint/37/5/706
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