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Faculty Member Nichole Scaglione, Ph.D., CHES

Nichole Scaglione, Ph.D., CHES

Assistant Professor, Department of Health Education and Behavior

(352) 294-0548

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Meet Nichole Scaglione, Ph.D., CHES

Assistant Professor


Education

  • Ph.D. in Biobehavioral Health, Pennsylvania State University (2015)
  • M.S. in Health Promotion, Miami University (Ohio; 2008)
  • B.A. in Psychology, Miami University (Ohio, 2006)

Scaglione CV (PDF)

SAPR Lab Website

Biography

Nichole Scaglione, Ph.D., CHES, is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Health Education and Behavior. Dr. Scaglione has over 10 years of experience leading federally-funded (i.e., DoD, CDC, NIH) projects aimed at reducing substance misuse and sexual violence in adolescents and young adults.

Her research combines health behavior theory and mobile technologies to examine decision-making processes associated with drinking, drug use, and sexual risk, both globally and at the event level (during specific drinking/substance use occasions).

She uses findings from her etiological work to develop and test interventions that target these processes to reduce individual and community risk for sexual violence (current NIH/NIAAA R34).

Prior to joining the HEB faculty, Dr. Scaglione was a public health scientist at RTI International where she played a major role in the development and feasibility testing of a tailored, tablet-based sexual assault prevention program in Basic Military Training for the U.S. Air Force. She has recently adapted and tested the efficacy of this training for the U.S. Air Force Academy.

Other ongoing projects include a community-based evaluation of a bystander and violence prevention training for staff at alcohol-serving establishments (CDC U01), a rigorous evaluation of a sexual violence prevention program for high school boys (CDC R01), and secondary data analysis of event-level alcohol use and contextual risk factors associated with sexual risk in college.

Research Interests

  • Risk and protective behaviors associated with sexual assault outcomes (victimization, revictimization, perpetration, bystander behavior)
  • Decision-making processes that impact substance use and sexual risk
  • Novel interventions for preventing violence and/or substance abuse
  • Adolescent, college, and military populations
  • Event-level data collection and intervention methods

Recent Publications