Background
Titles
- Associate Professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences
- Associate Professor of Oncology
Departments / Divisions
- Oncology - Cancer Prevention and Control and Viral Oncology
- Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences
Substance abuse; Depression; HIV risk behaviors; Epidemiological trends in substance abuse among medical patients ...read more
Hutton HE, Wilson LM, Tang EA, Odelola O, Elf JL, Heckmann-Stoddard BM, Bass EB, Apelberg BJ, Chander G. A systematic review of randomized controlled trials: web-based interventions for smoking cessation among adolescents, college students, and adults. Nicotine Tob Res, 2011;13(4):227-238.
Neblett RC, Hutton HE, Lau B, McCaul ME, Moore RD, Chander G. Alcohol consumption among HIV-infected women: impact on time to antiretroviral therapy and survival. J Womens Health, 2011;20(2):279-286.
Kowalski S, Colantuoni E, Lau B, Keruly J, McCaul ME, Hutton HE, Moore RD, Chander G. Alcohol consumption and CD 4 cell count response among persons initiating antiretroviral therapy. J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr, 2012;61:455-461.
Hutton HE, McCaul ME, Chander G, Jenckes MW, Nollen C, Sharp VL, Erbelding EJ. Alcohol use, anal sex, and other risky sexual behaviors among HIV-infected women and men. AIDS Behav, 2013;17(5):1694-1704.
Hutton HE, Chander G, Weingarten K, Green P, Hutsell C, Peterson K. A novel integration effort: reducing the risk for alcohol-exposed pregnancy among women attending urban STD clinics. Public Health Rep, 2014;129 Spl.1: 56-62.
Hutton HE, McCaul ME, Norris J, Valliant JD, Abrefa-Gyan T, Chander G. Sex-Related Alcohol Expectancies among African American Women Attending an Urban STI Clinic. J Sex Research: In press.
Patient Ratings & Comments
The Patient Rating score is an average of all responses to physician related questions on the national CG-CAHPS Medical Practice patient experience survey through Press Ganey. Responses are measured on a scale of 1 to 5, with 5 being the best score. Comments are also gathered from our CG-CAHPS Medical Practice Survey through Press Ganey and displayed in their entirety. Patients are de-identified for confidentiality and patient privacy.