Rural Aging

Event



Rural Aging

Mar 3, 2025 at - | McNeil Room 403 - PSC Commons

Series
Name
Professor
Syracuse University
Name
Associate Professor
The Pennsylvania State University
Speaker Biographies

Shannon Monnat is the Lerner Chair in Public Health Promotion and Population Health, director of the Center for Policy Research, and professor of sociology in the Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs at Syracuse University.

Monnat is a rural demographer and population health scholar whose research examines trends and geographic differences in health and mortality, with a special interest in rural health and health disparities. She is a leading national expert on structural and spatial determinants of drug overdose and other deaths of despair. Her most recent research has focused on geographic differences in COVID-19 experiences and impacts.

She has published over 70 peer-reviewed journal articles and book chapters, and she regularly writes policy briefs for non-academic audiences. Monnat has been the PI or co-investigator on externally funded projects totaling over $12 million, including from the National Institutes of Health, National Institute of Justice, United States Department of Agriculture, Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, and Institute for New Economic Thinking.

She currently leads a NIDA-funded project to examine the effects of state’s COVID-19 mitigation policies on working-age adult psychological well-being, drug overdose, and suicide and co-leads an NIA-funded project on how state policies and county economic conditions have jointly contributed to the large and growing geographic disparities in midlife mortality, psychosocial wellbeing, and health behaviors in the U.S. Monnat teaches courses in demographic processes and health and place.

Brian C. Thiede is a researcher with a robust program of study centered on two substantive areas. The first focuses on the intersections of climate change, demographic and health outcomes, and economic development, particularly in low- and middle-income countries. This work includes two NIH-funded projects. One investigates the compounding effects of armed conflict and climate shocks on maternal and child health in sub-Saharan Africa. The other explores the long-term health impacts of weather shocks experienced during childhood through early adulthood, using panel data from Indonesia and Mexico.

The second area of Dr Thiede's research examines poverty and inequality in the United States. Current projects in this domain analyze income inequality in rural communities and assess the relationship between natural resource development and economic outcomes. Through this diverse body of work, [Name] aims to generate insights that inform policy and promote equity on both global and domestic scales.