Nancy L Van Devanter

Faculty

Nancy L Van Devanter headshot

Nancy L Van Devanter

PhD

Professor Emerita

1 212 998 5328

433 FIRST AVENUE
NEW YORK, NY 10010
United States

Nancy L Van Devanter's additional information

Nancy L. Van Devanter, PhD, is a Professor Emerita at NYU Rory Meyers College of Nursing. Since the 1990s, she has conducted behavioral intervention research integrating a community-based participatory research approach into the development and testing of theory-driven interventions to promote health and reduce disease in populations with significant health disparities in HIV, STDs, and tobacco-related disease. She has also worked in close collaboration with state and local health departments to develop programs improve community-level health and public health practice. Since coming to NYU, she has been involved in numerous interdisciplinary collaborative studies with the NYU School of Medicine, Dentistry, and Public Health Program.

 

 

PhD, Columbia University School of Public Health
MPH, Harvard School of Public Health
EdM, Boston University
BS, Boston University
Diploma, St Agnes School of Nursing
HIV/AIDS
American Nurses Association
American Public Health Association
American Sociological Association
Council for the Advancement of Nursing Science
Public Health Association of New York City

Faculty Honors Awards

Fellow, American Academy of Nursing (2011)
Fellow, New York Academy of Medicine (2011)
Public Health Achievement Award, New York City Department of Health/ Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University (1999)
Fellowship in STD Prevention Association of Teachers of Preventive Medicine, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (1999)
Commendation, Office the Secretary, US Department of Health and Human Services for contribution to the National AIDS Education Prevention Program (1998)

Publications

Cervical intraepithelial neoplasia in women infected with human immunodeficiency virus : Prevalence, risk factors, and validity of papanicolaou smears

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Depressive symptoms in blood donors notified of HIV infection

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HIV testing and counseling

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Behavior changes after notification of HIV infection

Cleary, P. D., Van Devanter, N., Rogers, T. F., Singer, E., Shipton-Levy, R., Steilen, M., Stuart, A., Avorn, J., Pindyck, J., & Van Devanter, N. L. (1991). In American journal of public health (Vols. 81, Issues 12, pp. 1586-1590). 10.2105/AJPH.81.12.1586
Abstract
Abstract
Background. To learn more about how people who did not volunteer for testing react to information about HIV infection, we assessed short-term behavior changes in HIV-positive blood donors. Methods. Blood donors who were notified at the New York Blood Center that they were HIV positive were asked to participate in a study. A nurse elicited a medical history, performed a limited medical examination, and asked participants to complete a questionnaire that included questions about drug use, sexual behavior, and psychological characteristics. Participants were asked to return in 2 weeks to complete another questionnaire. Results. Many fewer men and women reported engaging in unsafe sexual behaviors in the 2 weeks preceding the follow-up visit than had reported such behaviors prior to notification. These changes were greater than those other investigators have reported, but about 40% of the participants still reported unsafe sexual activity at the follow-up interview. Conclusions. To make nonvolunteer screening programs for HIV infection more effective in reducing the spread of HIV infection, we need to learn more about how to help people change their high-risk behaviors.

HIV-2 infection in an American

O'Brien, T. R., Polon, C., Schable, C. A., VanDevanter, N., Rayfield, M. A., Wallace, D., Stuart, A., Holmberg, S. D., & Van Devanter, N. L. (1991). In AIDS (Vols. 5, Issue 1, pp. 85-88). 10.1097/00002030-199101000-00012
Abstract
Abstract
HIV-2 is endemic in West Africa but rare elsewhere. In the USA there have been 18 reported cases of HIV-2 infection; most identified people have been West Africans. We recently diagnosed the first case of HIV-2 infection in a native-born US citizen, a woman whose serum was found to be reactive to anti-HIV-1 enzyme immunoassay (EIA) when she attempted to donate blood in 1986. Although both HIV-1- and HIV-2-specific EIAs were reactive, the anti-HIV-2 Western blot (WB) was positive, while the anti-HIV-1 WB was positive or indeterminate on different occasions. Synthetic peptide testing was reactive for HIV-2 but not HIV-1. HIV-2 DNA was detected using the polymerase chain reaction procedure. Although she had travelled to West Africa, it is unclear how she became infected with HIV-2.

Trends in sociodemographic and behavioral characteristics of HIV antibody-positive blood donors

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A GROUP INTERVENTION MODEL FOR INDIVIDUALS TESTING POSITIVE FOR HIV ANTIBODY

Levy, R. S., Tendler, C., VanDevanter, N., Cleary, P. D., & Van Devanter, N. L. (1990). In American Journal of Orthopsychiatry (Vols. 60, Issues 3, pp. 452-459). 10.1037/h0079192
Abstract
Abstract
The development of a structured psychoeducational support group model for blood donors who tested positive for human immunodeficiency virus Type I antibody is described. Salient group therapy techniques and educational content are discussed, issues of group structure are identified, and the need for support of clinicians is highlighted. 1990 American Orthopsychiatric Association

Effect of Hospitalwide Change in Clindamycin Closing Schedule on Clinical Outcome

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Sociodemographic and behavioral characteristics of HIV antibody-positive blood donors

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Counseling HIV-antibody positive blood donors.

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