Daniel recently completed his PhD in Communication at the University of Utah with an emphasis in Health Communication. Daniel also holds a Bachelor of Science in History, Philosophy and Sociology of Science/Spanish from Michigan State University in 2011, and a Master of Public Health (MPH) in Health Behavior and Education from the University of Michigan in 2013. Daniel has lived and worked in the Deep South for the past 6 years working within the University of Alabama at Birmingham School of Public Health, School of Medicine, and most recently My Brother's Keeper, Inc. in Mississippi. Daniel's past research has focused on minority mental health disparities with an emphasis on the role nativity, discrimination, and acculturation, but he has also served on projects ranging from assessing physical activity behaviors among childbearing Latinas in mid-Michigan, completing assessment of attitude, beliefs and behaviors of Dengue fever prevention program in the Dominican Republic, and developing an overview of physical and dietary habits among adolescent and their metabolic profiles in Santiago, Chile.
Most recently, Daniel has worked chronic disease prevention programs, HIV/AIDS, and teen pregnancy prevention among underserved, primarily, African American, Latinx and other minority, populations throughout the state of Mississippi, and subgroups, such as those in rural areas, and African American men who have sex with men (MSM). Daniel has over 8 years of public health and behavioral science experience in the areas of research and evaluation, management, leadership development, and grant development, which includes monitoring the activities and performance of partners, collecting and analyzing data to assess program progress, using data to make continuous quality improvements, and conducting implementation evaluation.
To see Daniel’s full research activities, service, mentorship, teaching, and more please visit his CV.