Dashboard Members José Szapocznik

Dr. José Szapocznik
Professor, Chair Emeritus Department of Public Health Sciences, Honorary Director, Clinical & Translational Science Institute
University of Miami Miller School of Medicine
Discipline: Medicine
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Szapocznik, a clinical psychologist, is Professor of Public Health Sciences, Architecture, Psychology, and Educational & Psychological Studies (in the schools of Medicine, Architecture, Arts & Sciences, and Education, respectively). He has over 300 scholarly publications, has received over $125 million in NIH funding; is Chair Emeritus of the Department of Public Health Sciences, Founding Director and former PI of the Miami Clinical Translational Science Institute (CTSA), and former Executive Dean for Research and Research Education, all at the University of Miami. In its 24th year, he is also Founding PI/Director of the Florida Node Alliance of the National Drug Abuse Treatment Clinical Trials Network, a clinical trials research center. Szapocznik mentored dozens of early-career investigators, over a dozen of whom are today tenured professors, center directors, chairs, deans, and provosts, including prominent racial/ethnic minority investigators.
His honors include the Presidential Award of the Society for Prevention Research, the Distinguished Professional Contributions to Public Service Award of the American Psychological Association, an NIMH Merit Award, twice the Outstanding Publication Award of the American Association of Marriage and Family Therapy, the National Leadership Award for Academic Excellence from the National Hispanic Alliance for Health, the Award for Special Contributions to Cultural Diversity of the American Family Therapy Academy, and the Ruben Hill Award of the National Council on Family Relations. Within the US Department of Health and Human Services, Szapocznik served in the National Advisory Councils of the NIH/National Institute on Mental Health, the NIH/National Institute on Drug Abuse, the NIH/National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities, the SAMSHA/Center for Substance Abuse Prevention, and was the first behavioral scientist ever appointed to the NIH-wide AIDS Program Advisory Committee (currently the NIH Office of AIDS Research Advisory Council).
Szapocznik’s research has focused on the role of context (physical, sociocultural systems,) on health, with a particular focus on the health of under-represented racial and ethnic minorities. He established and chaired for its first decade the first, and at the time only, Hispanic health science network in the U.S., and was a member and/or chaired over a dozen national research policy committees for the US DHHS and national professional and advocacy organizations focused on minority health
His honors include the Presidential Award of the Society for Prevention Research, the Distinguished Professional Contributions to Public Service Award of the American Psychological Association, an NIMH Merit Award, twice the Outstanding Publication Award of the American Association of Marriage and Family Therapy, the National Leadership Award for Academic Excellence from the National Hispanic Alliance for Health, the Award for Special Contributions to Cultural Diversity of the American Family Therapy Academy, and the Ruben Hill Award of the National Council on Family Relations. Within the US Department of Health and Human Services, Szapocznik served in the National Advisory Councils of the NIH/National Institute on Mental Health, the NIH/National Institute on Drug Abuse, the NIH/National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities, the SAMSHA/Center for Substance Abuse Prevention, and was the first behavioral scientist ever appointed to the NIH-wide AIDS Program Advisory Committee (currently the NIH Office of AIDS Research Advisory Council).
Szapocznik’s research has focused on the role of context (physical, sociocultural systems,) on health, with a particular focus on the health of under-represented racial and ethnic minorities. He established and chaired for its first decade the first, and at the time only, Hispanic health science network in the U.S., and was a member and/or chaired over a dozen national research policy committees for the US DHHS and national professional and advocacy organizations focused on minority health