Jen Cruz (she/her) graduated from Seattle U’s Psychology department in 2016 with her Bachelor of Science. She then moved to New Delhi, India as a Fulbright-Nehru Student Researcher and Critical Language Enhancement Award recipient. During her time in the Fulbright program, Jen conducted a mixed-methods study investigating perceived barriers to care, attitudes towards the HPV vaccine, stigma associated with cervical cancer, and health literacy. She went on to earn her Master of Public Health in Global Health Epidemiology from the University of Michigan’s School of Public Health in 2020. Drawing from her previous training in Psychology, Jen used Social Cognitive Theory to guide her analysis on shifts in predictors of acceptance of domestic violence among young, unmarried women in India. During her time at Michigan, Jen was involved in research at the Center for Social Epidemiology and Population Health and the Center for Sexuality and Health Disparities which further solidified her research interests in social epidemiology, health equity, and community-based research.
Currently, Jen is a Population Health Sciences PhD candidate in the Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences at Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health specializing in Applied Social Epidemiology. She is a predoctoral fellow at the Harvard/Dana-Farber Cancer Institute Educational Program in Cancer Prevention, a National Institutes of Health T32 grant, as well as a member of the FXB Center for Health & Human Rights PhD & DrPH cohort. Jen’s dissertation is focused on exploring the heterogeneity of rurality in the US to better identify context-specific interventions aimed at addressing persistent breast cancer screening inequities. She also supports research in the Implementation Science Center for Cancer Control Equity and the Ramanadhan Lab as a graduate student research assistant. In addition to her research roles, she serves as a Teaching Fellow for courses in advanced social science and epidemiological methods, qualitative data analysis, and community-based participatory research.
Outside of the institution, Jen is an active member of the Allston-Brighton neighborhood of Boston. She has received the Presidential Public Service Fellowship and Rose Service Learning Fellowship to support her community work with the Allston Brighton Health Collaborative (ABHC)- a local non-profit that convenes a network of local organizations, residents, elected officials, and advocates to improve systems that affect public health and wellbeing. Drawing from her academic training and experience as a community organizer, Jen designed and piloted the Community Health Advocate Mobilization Program (CHAMP). CHAMP is a community-centered public health education program with the primary goal to increase community members’ knowledge, skills, and language that complement their current expertise so that they can advocate for the public health needs of their neighborhood. Starting in 2023 she has also joined the steering committee bringing her experience as a resident and public health professional.
Jen is a first-generation student from Wapato, WA- a small, rural community on the Yakama Reservation that continues to inspire her academic work and organizing efforts. She is also the proud mom of a 10-year-old dachshund-beagle named Maple.
As a scholar, my research has always circled a central thread; what does it mean to truly connect? Our relationships with each other are perhaps the most important and special things we do as human beings, but how and why do they matter so much to us? Currently, I study at the University of Edinburgh where my PhD focuses on the emotion of feeling "moved" or "touched", and what it means for bringing people together. I've presented my research at international conferences and recently awarded Highly Commended (Runner-Up) for Best Small Data-Driven Project by the Centre for Data, Culture and Society. My teaching in statistics has also been recognized with a Tutor Excellence Award in 2021/2022 and recently nominated for Student Tutor of the Year 2022/2023.
A common theme throughout my work is grappling with not just how to form a question and a way to answer it, but to understand the framing behind it. To this end, I rely heavily on the statistics and research methods training I got from the 3030/3050 and 4030 courses. Additionally, the critical thinking skills that the SU Psychology Department so often emphasizes throughout their curriculum help me think creatively, synthesize different viewpoints, look to the big picture, and ask why it all matters. For me, this background of research methods and critical thinking has not only opened doors but also allowed me to walk through them with competence and confidence.