Addiction (68) Administrative Data Accelerator (1) Adolescents (2) African Studies (1) Aging (1) AI (1) Alcohol (16) Award (6) Bennett Lecture (1) Biobehavioral Health (2) Brain Development (2) CCSA (55) Center for Health Care Policy Research (1) Child Development (2) Child Health (1) Child Maltreatment (2) Child Maltreatment Solutions Network (3) Child Study Center (1) Climate Change (1) College of Education (2) College of Health and Human Development (12) College of Information Sciences and Technology (2) College of Medicine (7) College of Nursing (2) College of the Liberal Arts (4) Community (4) Community-Engaged (1) Conference (8) COSSA (2) COVID-19 (2) Criminal Justice (12) Criminal Justice Research Center (5) Criminology (1) CSUA (63) CTSI (6) DEI (1) Demography (3) Depression (2) Domestic Abuse (2) Edna Bennett Pierce Prevention Research Center (20) Education (1) EIC (8) EIC Podcast (3) Employment (2) Faculty Information (2) Family (5) Fellowship (2) Friends (2) Funding (6) Gambling (2) Genetics (1) Geography (1) Geroscience and Dementia Prevention Consortium (1) Government (2) Health Care (3) Health Policy and Administration (3) Housing (1) Huck (1) Human Development and Family Studies (9) Human Trafficking (2) IFSE Workshop (1) Impact (1) Inequities (1) Information Technology (1) Institutes of Energy and the Environment (1) Interventions (1) Latino (1) Law (1) Lecture (2) Marijuana (4) Maternal Health (1) Mental Health (4) Mindfulness (4) Neurology (1) NIH (4) Obesity (2) Open Access Research (1) Opioids (100) OSVPR (1) Overdose (6) Pain (4) Penn State Law (2) Penn State Research (27) Pennsylvania Addiction Action Network (1) Podcast (4) Policymaking (6) Pregnancy (7) Prevention Science (7) PRI (1) PROSPER (2) Provost Visit (1) Psychology (5) Public Health Sciences (2) Public Policy (3) Racial and Ethnic Minorities (2) Recovery (4) Research (6) Research Evidence (1) Research-to-Policy Collaboration (1) Rural Communities (3) Rural Health (2) Rural Sociology (1) School (1) Seed Funding (4) Sexual Minorities (1) SLEIC (1) Smoking (7) Social Science (12) Sociology (3) Spring Gathering (1) SSRI (33) SSRI Affiliates (1) SSRI Cofunds (13) SSRI Director (1) SSRI Staff (1) Stress (1) Substance Abuse (67) Substance Use (85) Suicide (3) Support Resources (1) Symposium (2) Tax Revenue (2) Teens (4) Tobacco (2) Transportation (1) Vaping (1) Veterans (1) Violence (1) Why Social Science? (2) Workshop (1)

Penn State social scientists support federal research funding at COSSA Day

A distinguished delegation of Penn State researchers traveled to Washington, D.C., March 24-25, to participate in the annual Consortium of Social Science Association's (COSSA) Social Science Advocacy Day. The event brought together social and behavioral scientists from across the nation to engage…

Recovery community centers linked to support factors for substance use recovery

More than 46 million people in the U.S. suffered from substance use disorders and more than 100,000 died by overdose in 2001, according to the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration. To address this crisis, recovery community centers (RCCs) have emerged in cities across the U.S.…

Harm reduction education, tools access may help women prevent opioid overdose

Woman with opioid use disorder and who are also involved with the criminal legal system face unique challenges and stigmas that may keep them from seeking substance use treatment and harm reduction tools that could prevent overdose deaths, according to new research led by a team from Penn State.…

Fentanyl and COVID-19 pandemic reshaped racial profile of overdose deaths in US

For as long as statistics about opioid overdose deaths have been collected in the United States, white individuals have been much more likely to die than Black individuals of the same age. With the rapidly increasing rate of fentanyl overdoses in the late 2010s, that trend began to…

Suicidality among individuals with substance use disorders increased in 2020

Individuals with substance use disorders (SUDs) were significantly more likely to consider, plan and attempt suicide than those without SUDs in 2020, according to a new study by researchers at Penn State. Adolescents and women with SUDs were also more likely to experience suicidality — the term for…

Abenaa Jones named Ann Atherton Hertzler Early Career Professor

Abenaa Jones, assistant professor of human development and family studies, has been named the Ann Atherton Hertzler Early Career Professor in Health and Human Development at Penn State. Jones works to find solutions to complex, real-world problems, including substance use disorders, social and…

Can wearable technology predict the negative consequences of drinking?

“How much have you had to drink?” might seem like a simple question, but it is not always easy to answer. Although there are general guidelines about responsible alcohol consumption, a person’s level of intoxication depends not only on the number of drinks they consume but also on the alcohol…

Human development and family studies professor joins Recovery Rising initiative

H. Harrington ‘Bo’ Cleveland, professor of human development and family studies at Penn State and SSRI cofunded faculty member, has been appointed to the Pennsylvania Department of Drug and Alcohol Programs’ Recovery Rising initiative. Recovery Rising works to foster a resilient, diverse and…

Researchers estimate societal costs of the opioid epidemic

The devastating consequences of the opioid crisis are far-reaching in the United States, impacting public health as well as social and economic welfare. Penn State researchers recently collaborated to address the issue in a supplement of The American Journal of Managed Care, titled “Deaths, Dollars…

Penn State-led national coalition bringing prevention science to life

Over the past four decades, prevention science has grown steadily, producing evidence-based practices and policies that prevent negative medical, social and emotional impacts before they occur. Increasingly, the Penn State-led National Prevention Science Coalition to Improve Lives(NPSC) is being…

Opioid epidemic may have cost U.S. governments $37.8 billion in tax revenue

The opioid epidemic may have cost U.S. state and federal governments up to $37.8 billion in lost tax revenue due to opioid-related employment loss, according to Penn State researchers. Additionally, the researchers found that Pennsylvania was one of the states with the most lost revenue, with…

Penn State is represented at congressional briefing addressing opioid epidemic

Penn State researcher Stephanie Bradley, director of the Evidence-Based Prevention & Intervention Support Center (EPISCenter), was one of five experts on a panel who recently briefed Congress on the rising opioid epidemic and efforts to combat the problem through evidence-based prevention…