Ph.D. Candidate, College of Public Health, University of Georgia
I'm a PhD candidate in Health Promotion and Behavior (the communications and behavioral science arm of public health, as I usually explain.) My dissertation (in progress) is on alternative health networks providing increased healthcare options in the southeast for Latino immigrants (usually called botanicas.) I've interned full time at The Carter Center, and was a Quechua Federal Language and Area Studies Fellow, as well as a Goizueta Foundation graduate scholar. Besides my academic focus on Latino immigrant and Indigenous health; I've traveled extensively in Latin America consulting with Indigenous groups in Costa Rica, Nicaragua, Colombia, and Guatemala -- and learned about the common use of alternative medicine in the Cuban healthcare system during my two week visit there in 2013. At this point, I've published two peer reviewed articles in my field and written freelance articles for a number of venues, mostly about public health and human rights in Indigenous communities.

How traditional medicine can play a key role in Latino health care
Mar 06, 2017 02:31 am UTC| Health
In the U.S., many undocumented individuals and other vulnerable groups in the Latino immigrant population, such as indigenous language speakers, are already marginalized from mainstream health services. Increased scrutiny...