McGuinn Hall 210
Telephone: 617-552-0945
Email: summer.hawkins@bc.edu
Social Epidemiology; Policy Evaluation; Health Disparities; Tobacco Use; Infant Feeding
ÇéÉ«¿Õ¼äSSW News: What happens when states ban the sale of flavored tobacco products?
ÇéÉ«¿Õ¼äSSW News: Undergraduate student researchers confront ‘messy reality’ of the real world
Professor Summer Sherburne Hawkins, PhD, MS, joined the Boston College School of Social Work (ÇéÉ«¿Õ¼äSSW) faculty in 2012. She is a social epidemiologist with an interest in addressing policy-relevant research questions in women’s and children’s health. Her research examines the impact of policies on health disparities in parents and children, particularly using methodology that integrates epidemiology and economics. She uses applied econometric techniques to evaluate natural experiments created through policy changes within and between U.S. states, including substance use policies, reproductive health-related policies, breastfeeding policies, and the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act.
Professor Hawkins has published in prominent peer-reviewed public health journals on the topics of tobacco and cannabis use, maternal morbidity and mortality, infant feeding practices, and preventive health services, as well as the impact of state policies on disparities in these health behaviors and outcomes.
Professor Hawkins is currently the Assistant Director of theÌýInstitute of Early Childhood Policy at Boston College. She is also on the editorial boards for BMC Public Health andÌýMaternal and Child Nutrition.
Prior to joining ÇéÉ«¿Õ¼äSSW, Professor Hawkins was a Cohort 7 Robert Wood Johnson Health & Society Scholar at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health from 2009-2011.
Hawkins SS, Harper S, Baum CF, Kaufman JS. Associations between state-level changes in reproductive health services and indicators of severe maternal morbidity. JAMA Pediatrics 2023;177(1):93-95. doi: PMID: 36374506 PMCID: PMC9664365
Hawkins SS, Kruzik C, O’Brien M, Coley RL. Flavored tobacco product restrictions in Massachusetts associated with reductions in adolescent cigarette and e-cigarette use. Tobacco Control 2022;31(4):576-579. doi: ±Ê²Ñ±õ¶Ù:Ìý33504582
Hawkins SS, Horvath K, Noble A, Baum CF. ACA and Medicaid expansion increased breast pump claims and breastfeeding for women with public and private insurance. Women’s Health Issues 2022;32(2):114-121. doi: PMID: 34802860
Hawkins SS, Hacker MR. Trends in use of conventional cigarettes, e-cigarettes, and marijuana in pregnancy and impact of health policy. Clinical Obstetrics & Gynecology 2022; 65(2):305-318. doi: PMID: 35125389
Coley RL, Kruzik C, Ghiani M, Carey N, Hawkins SS, Baum CF. Recreational marijuana legalization and adolescent use of marijuana, tobacco, and alcohol. Journal of Adolescent Health 2021; 69(1):41-49. doi: ±Ê²Ñ±õ¶Ù:Ìý33243722Ìý
Hawkins SS, Baum CF. Commentary: Evaluating intersectionality of policies and populations. Pediatrics 2021;147(5):e2020049586. doi: ±Ê²Ñ±õ¶Ù:Ìý33875538
Hawkins SS, Baum CF. The downstream effects of state tobacco control policies on birth outcomes. Drug and Alcohol Dependence 2019; 205:107634. doi: PMID: 31669802
09/2023-08/2024 Grodman Family Foundation – titled, Evaluating the health impacts of disasters on youth
Role: Co-PI (with Betty Lai)
09/2021-08/2023 National Cancer Institute & FDA Center for Tobacco Products (R21CA268199) – titled, Impact analysis of flavor restrictions and tobacco 21 policies on youth tobacco useÌý
Role: PIÌý
07/2019-12/2021 American Lung Association Public Policy Research Award (PP- 625245) - titled, Impact of tobacco control and air quality policies on disparities in prenatal smoking and birth outcomes
Role: PI
Visiting Associate Professor, Department of Global Health & Social Medicine, King’s College London, England (09/18-08/19)
K99/R00 recipient – National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, 5-year career development award (R00HD068506) (2011-2016)
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