- Occupational determinants of health
- Health impacts of work-family interface
- Community-based intervention research methods
Dr. Okechukwu investigates how work environments influence the health and cancer prevention behaviors of vulnerable populations. She focuses on the working class, immigrant communities, and women who earn low wages. She also has an interest in global tobacco control, especially as it relates to tobacco industry practices in African countries.
Chief among Dr. Okechukwu research objectives is her desire to develop empirical findings that can be translated into population-wide interventions, and thus reduce health disparities and promote optimal health. In her work to date, she has led or collaborated on a number of studies, two of which were intervention studies of the type that epitomize her goals. One was designed to reduce workplace violence among community health nurses and the other addressed smoking among blue-collar apprentices. In these studies, as in much of Dr. Okechukwu’s work, less-visible members of the working class are the beneficiaries of health interventions.
Dr. Okechukwu is on the internal advisory board of the Harvard Center for Work, Health and Wellbeing and is on the advisory committee for the NCI Cancer Prevention Fellowship.
