09/21/16
Curriculum Vitae
Celette Sugg Skinner, Ph.D.
Contact information: Building E-506
5323 Harry Hines Blvd.
Dallas, TX 75390-9066
Telephone: (214) 648-5499
E-mail: [email protected]
Education: BA, 1980 – Political Science (Magna Cum Laude)
Furman University, Greenville, SC
MA, 1982 – Communications (With Highest Honors)
Wheaton Graduate School, Wheaton, IL
PhD, 1991 – Public Health; Health Behavior
UNC Gillings School of Global Public Health, Chapel Hill, NC
Honoraries: Phi Beta Kappa and Pi Gamma Mu, Furman University
Appointments:
4/’15 – present Interim Chair, Department of Clinical Sciences, UT Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, TX
4/’14 – present Parkland Professor of Community Medicine, Endowed by the Parkland Foundation, UT
Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, TX
4/’07 – present Professor & Chief, Division of Behavioral & Communication Sciences, Department of
Clinical Sciences, Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, TX
4/’07 – present Associate Director, Cancer Control & Population Sciences, Harold C. Simmons
Comprehensive Cancer Center, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, TX
12/’07 – present Professor, Clinical Psychology, University of Texas Southwestern Graduate School of
Biomedical Sciences, Dallas, TX
1/’14 – present Adjunct Professor, University of Texas School of Public Health, Houston, TX
5/’05 – 3/’07 Associate Director, Population Research and Interim Director, Research Program in Cancer
Prevention, Detection & Control, Duke Comprehensive Cancer Center, Durham, NC
5/’03 – 3/’07 Associate Professor with Tenure, Departments of Surgery and Community & Family
Medicine, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC
10/’98 – 4/’03 Associate Professor, Departments of Surgery and Community & Family Medicine,
Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC
10/’98 – 5/’05 Member, Prevention, Detection & Control Program, Duke University Comprehensive
Cancer Center, Durham, NC
10/’99 – present Adjunct Professor, Department of Health Education & Health Behavior, Gillings School of
Global Public Health, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC
8/’05 – 7/’10 Adjunct Associate Professor, School of Nursing, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
7/’95 – 9/’98 Assistant Professor, Mallinckrodt Institute of Radiology, Washington University School of
Medicine and Member, Prevention & Control and Cancer Genetics Programs, Washington
University Siteman Cancer Center, St. Louis, MO
CS Skinner, CV 09/21/16
9/’93 – 7/’95 Instructor, Mallinckrodt Institute of Radiology, Division of Clinical Research, Washington
University School of Medicine, St. Louis, MO
2/’92 – 7/’93 Lecturer, Department of Medicine, Division of Hematology/Oncology and Member,
Clinical Practice & Health Policy Analysis Section, Regenstrief Institute for Health Care,
Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, IN
1/’88 – 6/’91 Project Manager and Teaching Assistant, Department of Health Behavior, UNC School
Public Health, Chapel Hill, NC
7/’84 – 11/’87 Consulting Partner, Skinner & Britt Research Communications, Durham, NC
1/’83 – 6/’84 Director of Marketing & Product Research, Victor Books Publishing Co., Glen Ellyn, IL
1/’82 – 12/’82 Coordinator of Research, Management Development Associates, Wheaton, IL
Teaching/Mentoring:
Regenstrief Institute for Health Care Research, Indiana University Medical School –
Participating Faculty: Clinical Scholar Training Program (Kl2; PI Robert Dittus)
Washington University in St. Louis - Chair: Dissertation Committee for Dr. Elizabeth L. Ryan
Washington University Department of Psychology, 1996-1997
Member: Thesis Committee for Chiung-Ying Chen, Washington University School of
Occupational Therapy (1995); Dissertation Committees for Drs. Thomas Burroughs (1997) and
Gretchen Brennes (1998) Washington University Department of Psychology
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill – Member: Dissertation Committee for Drs. Sarah C. Kobrin
(2000-2002), Laura Fish (2005-2006), and Jennifer Gierish (2004-2007), Gillings School of Global
Public Health, Department of Health Behavior, and Denise Spector (2005-2007) School of
Nursing
Preceptor: Master’s Practicum for Adam Buchanan, Gillings School of Global Public Health,
Department of Health Behavior, 1999-2000
Lecturer: Seminar in Health Communications, Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center, 1999;
Seminar in Cancer Prevention & Control, Department of Epidemiology, 2000-2006; and
Evaluation Research Methods and Social & Behavioral Science Foundations of Health
Education, Department of Health Behavior, 2003-2006, Gillings School of Global Public Health
Duke University Medical Center - Mentor: Veterans’ Administration Career Development Award to Lori
Bastian, MD, 1999-2002; 3rd-Yr Medical Student Clinical Research Rotation for Lisa Ross, 2002-
2003; PAIR Program Cancer Prevention & Control Summer Internship for Camille Wright,
2003; Behavioral Cooperative Oncology Group Post-Doctoral Fellowship for Sarah C. Kobrin,
PhD, 2002-2003
Lecturer: Clinical Research Methods, DUMC Masters’ Program in Clinical Research, 2002-2003;
Evidence-Based Medicine, DUMC Physician’s Assistant Program, 2003; Research in Cancer
Control, Duke University Medical Center, North Carolina Central University & Lincoln
Community Health Center Partnership to Eliminate Disparities in Cancer Outcomes and
Research, 2003, 2005
University of Texas School of Public Health Dallas Regional Campus – Lecturer: Health Disparities, 2008;
Health Behavior Theory, 2009.
CS Skinner, CV 09/21/16
University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center – Mentor: CTSA KL2 Clinical Scholars Anna Brandon,
PhD, Samir Gupta, MD, Kimberly Perry, DDS., Manjula Julka, MD, 2007-2010; David Gerber,
MD, 2011-2013; Stephen Inrig, PhD, Amit Singal, MD, 2011-2013, Una Makris, 2014-2015, &
Jaqueline Powers, MD, 2015-2016, UT Southwestern Center for Translational Medicine
Mentor/Lecturer: Community Action Research Track, UT Southwestern Medical School, 2008;
Research Methods, 2015; Outcomes and Health Services Research, Department of Clinical
Sciences, 2011-2016; Health Behavior, Department of Clinical Nutrition, 2013
Member: Dissertation Committee for Drs. Todd Dunn, Department of Psychology, 2007-
2009 & Andrea Croom, 2010-2012
Co-Director: Writing Scientific Grant Applications course, KL2 Clinical Scholars Master’s
Program, Department of Clinical Sciences, UT Southwestern. 2009-present
Chair: K Grant Pre-Review Committee, UT Southwestern Center for Medicine. 2009-
present.
Chair: Community-Based Pilot Research Grants Program, UT Southwestern, 2013-present
Panels and committees:
National Cancer Institute/NIH
Member: NCI SPECIAL EMPHASIS PANEL, RFA CA97-018, Long-Term Cancer
Survivors: Research Initiatives Bethesda, MD, 18-20 March, 1998
Ad Hoc Member: NIH REVIEW PANEL for Sociology, Nursing, Epidemiology and
Medicine (SNEM 1), October 1999; Small Business Research Grants (SBIR), March 2002
& Sept 2004; Subcommittee G (R25 & K Awards), October 2003; Community-Level
Health Promotion (CLHP), October 2006; Health Services Organization & Development, June 2007.
Charter Member: NIH REVIEW PANEL for Community Level Health Promotion (CLHP), 2008-2012
Chair: CANCER GENETICS NETWORK Education & Communications Committee, 1998
and Behavioral Sciences Working Group (Co-Chair), 1999-2004
Member: NATIONAL COMPREHENSIVE CANCER NETWORK Breast Cancer Screening
Panel, 2001-2007
Member: NATIONAL CONSORTIUM OF CLINICAL TRANSLATIONAL SCIENCE
INSTITUTE’S Community Engagement Working Group, 2007-2013
Chair: NCI PROSPR Consortium National Steering Committee, 2011-2013
Member: Moon Shot Blue Ribbon Panel Workgroup on Dissemination & Implementation
Research, 2016
Washington University – Chair: Human Subjects Committee’s Task force on Health Services
Research, 1998; NATIONAL RESEARCH ADVISORY BOARD, Center of Excellence in
Cancer Communication Research (CECCR) at the Washington University Institute of
Public Health, 2009
Duke University – Leader: High-Risk Populations and Screening Emphasis Area, Cancer Prevention
Detection & Control Program, Duke Comprehensive Cancer Center, 2000-2003
Member: Bakke Scholars selection committee and faculty mentor, 1999-2001
CS Skinner, CV 09/21/16
University of Texas Southwestern School of Medicine – Member: Appointment, Promotions & Tenure
Committee, Department of Clinical Sciences, 2007-2015; UT Southwestern Obesity Outreach
Executive Committee, 2007-2010; Scientific Advisory Committee for the National Children’s
Study, 2008-2012; Protocol Review & Monitoring Committee and Disease-Oriented Team
Leaders Committee, Harold C. Simmons Comprehensive Cancer Center, 2008-2015; CTSA
Pilot Research Review Committee, 2008- 2014; Children’s Clinical Research Review
Committee, 2007- 2014; Health Services & Policy Research Task Force, 2009;
International/Underserved Task Force, 2009, Institutional Wellness Advisory Committee, 2009-
2016, UT Southwestern Post-Tenure Review Committee, 2013-2015, Six-Year Planning
Committee, UT Southwestern School of Health Professions, 2015-present, Dean’s Advisory
Council, 2015-present, UTSW-THR Academic Affiliation Agreement Workgroup, 2015-2016,
Research 6-year Strategic Planning Group, 2015-present, Search Committee for
Hematology/Oncology Division Chief, 2016. Chair: K Grant Applications Pre-review
Committee, 2008-2016.
University of Texas School of Public Health – Member, Dallas Regional Dean Search Committee, 2016
Government & Not-for-Profit Organizations – Member: Behavioral Cooperative Oncology Group
Executive Committee, Walther Cancer Research Institute, 1999-2007
Member: North Carolina Legislative Advisory Committee on Cancer Coordination &
Control, and Writing Group for the North Carolina Cancer Plan, North Carolina
Department of Health and Human Services, 1999-2007
Member: Board of Directors, MAP International, Inc., Brunswick, GA, 2001-2010 &
Selection Committee, MAP International Fellowship for Senior Medical Students, 2004-2009
Member: Board of Directors, UNC Gillings School of Global Public Health Foundation, 2011-2015
Chair Elect: Board of Directors, UNC Gillings School of Global Public Health Foundation, 2016
Member: Education Committee, American Association for Cancer Research, 2016-present
Professional societies & organizations: American Public Health Association, Society of Behavioral Medicine,
American Society for Preventive Oncology, American Association for Cancer Research
Consulting Relationships: United Health Care, Minneapolis, MN (1995)
DuPont Merck Pharmaceuticals, Wilmington, DE (1995)
Physicians Health Plan, St. Louis, MO (1996)
Vida Healthcare Inc., Minneapolis, MN (1997)
Saint Louis University Health Communications Laboratory, St. Louis, MO (1997-1998)
University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston (1999)
External Scientific Advisory Boards:
Member: Center of Excellence in Cancer Communication Research (CECCR) at the Saint
Louis University School of Public Health, 2004-2009, and at the George Warren Brown
Institute of Public Health at Washington University in St. Louis, 2009-present.
Member: 4CNC: CDC Cancer Prevention and Control Network site at the University of North
Carolina at Chapel Hill 2005-2006.
Member: Indiana University Simon Cancer Center 2006-2014
Member: Lineberger Center for Excellence in Cancer Survivorship, Lineberger Comprehensive
Cancer Center, 2007-2009.
CS Skinner, CV 09/21/16
Chair: UNC/North Carolina Central University Partnership Grant for Mentoring Minority
Scholars (NCI U54) 2010-present
Member: University of Virginia Cancer Center 2015-present.
Editorial Board Member: CANCER PREVENTION, EPIDEMIOLOGY & BIOMARKERS, 2001-2002
Ad Hoc Reviewer for: JOURNAL OF GENERAL INTERNAL MEDICINE, 1993, 2004
PATIENT EDUCATION & COUNSELING, 1993, 2001-2006
JOURNAL OF WOMEN'S HEALTH, 1994-1995
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, 1996, 1999, 2001
HEALTH EDUCATION THEORY & PRACTICE, Glanz K, Lewis FM,
& Rimer BK (Eds) Jossey-Bass Publishers, San Francisco, 1996
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PREVENTIVE MEDICINE, 1997-2005
HEALTH EDUCATION RESEARCH: THEORY & PRACTICE, 1997-2000, 2010
PSYCHOLOGY HEALTH & MEDICINE, 1997-1998
HEALTH PSYCHOLOGY, 1998-2003
PREVENTIVE MEDICINE, 1998, 2000, 2002-2003, 2006-2007
JOURNAL OF THE NATIONAL CANCER INSTITUTE, 1999
TAILORING HEALTH MESSAGES: CUSTOMIZING COMMUNICATION WITH
COMPUTER TECHNOLOGY, Kreuter MW, Farrell D, Olevitch L & Brennan L.
Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Publishers, Mahwah, NJ, 2000
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH, 2001-2002
HEALTH EDUCATION & BEHAVIOR, 2001
JOURNAL OF SOCIAL & CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2001
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN MEDICAL WOMEN’S ASSOCIATION, 2001, 2003
JOURNAL OF HEALTH CARE FOR THE POOR & UNDERSERVED, 2003
PSYCHOLOGY & HEALTH, 2003
HEALTH EDUCATION JOURNAL, 2003
CANCER PREVENTION, EPIDEMIOLOGY & BIOMARKERS, 2003-2008, 2010, 2015
JOURNAL OF HEALTH COMMUNICATIONS, 2003, 2005
CANCER PREVENTION & DETECTION, 2006
NORTH CAROLINA MEDICAL JOURNAL, 2006
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF BEHAVIORAL NUTRITION &
PHYSICAL ACTIVITY, 2006
JOURNAL OF CLINCAL ONCOLOGY, 2007
BMC WOMEN’S HEALTH, 2007
PUBLIC HEALTH GENOMICS, 2009
JOURNAL OF HEALTH COMMUNICATIONS, 2009
PSYCHOLOGY & AGING, 2010
CANCER, 2014, 2016
VACCINE, 2015
CS Skinner, CV 09/21/16
Research Support:
a. NIH:
1. National Cancer Institute, 1994–1998 ($381,000) PHS R25 5CA 66820
Principal Investigator – Breast cancer education for older, urban, minority women
2. National Cancer Institute, 1994–1998 ($870,000) PHS R01 CA/NR 58606
Co-Investigator – Interventions for breast cancer screening behaviors
3. National Cancer Institute, 1996-1999 ($50,000) PHS RO3 CA 71719
Principal Investigator – Genetic risk assessment counseling for breast cancer
4. National Institute for Nursing Research, 1996-2000 ($368,000 @ Washington Univ.) R01 NR 04081
Site Principal Investigator – Comparison of tailored interventions for mammography
5. National Cancer Institute, 1999-2004 ($93,936) RO1 CA 00014
Site Principal Investigator – Culturally relevant tailoring for cancer control in black women
6. National Cancer Institute, 1998-2002 (Project 3: $596,434) PO1 CA72099
The Duke University Cancer Prevention Research Unit
Project Leader – Promoting informed decision making about mammography
7. National Cancer Institute, 1998-2000 ($4,670,920) U24 CA78157
Co-Investigator – Carolina and Georgia Genetics Network Center
8. National Cancer Institute, 1995-2000 (Project 3: $850,000) PHS P50 CA68438; The Duke Breast
Cancer SPORE. Project Leader – Facilitating informed consent in BRCA testing decision making
9. National Cancer Institute, 1999-2004 ($1,663,852) RO1 CA63782
Co-Investigator – Increasing colorectal cancer screening among carpenters
10. National Cancer Institute, 2001-2003 ($50,000) RO3 CA93184
Co-Investigator – Tailored interventions for colon cancer screening
11. National Cancer Institute, 2002-2005 ($750,000) P20 CA 91433
Principal Investigator – Partnerships to eliminate disparities in cancer outcomes and research
12. National Cancer Institute, P50 CA068438 Specialized Program of Research Excellence in
Breast Cancer, 2003-2008 ($7,500,000) Project Leader – The Duke breast cancer SPORE
13. National Cancer Institute, 2003-2007 ($2,539,026) R01 CA100387
Co-Investigator – Enhancing Patient-Oncologist Communication
14. National Cancer Institute, 2004-2009 ($2,250,000) R01 CA105786
Site Principal Investigator – Finding the minimal intervention for mammography maintenance
15. National Institute for Nursing Research/National Cancer Institute, 2004-2011 ($2,500,000) RO1
NR008434 Site Principal Investigator, Promoting breast cancer screening via computer vs.
phone
16. National Cancer Institute, 2006-2011 ($2,340,000) 1 R01 CA115983 Site Principal Investigator – Promoting colon cancer screening among African Americans
17. National Cancer Institute, RO1 CA1223301, 2007-2011 ($2,000,000)
Principal Investigator – Facilitating Risk-Appropriate Colorectal Cancer Testing
18. National Institutes of Health, NIH U54RR023468, 2007-2012 ($4,186,261)
Co-Investigator - North and Central Texas Clinical and Translational Science Initiative
19. National Institutes of Health, NIH 3RO1 CA122330, 2009-2011 ($97,088)
ARRA Stimulus Administrative Supplement
CS Skinner, CV 09/21/16
Principal Investigator - Facilitating Risk-Appropriate Colorectal Cancer Testing Spanish CRIS (S-CRIS)
20. National Cancer Institute, 2011-2012 ($100,000) RO3 CA1159706
Mentor – Adherence to Cancer Risk Management Among Unaffected BRCA 1 & 2 Mutations
21. National Cancer Institute, 2011-2016 ($4,351,632) NCI U54 CA163308
Principal Investigator (with Ethan Halm, MD, MPH) - Population-based Research Optimizing Screening
for Colo-rectal Cancer through Personalized Regimens (PROSPR): The Parkland-UT Southwestern
PROSPR Center
22. National Cancer Institute, 2012-2015 ($100,000) R03 CA159706
Cancer Control Mentor: An Inter-Personal Framework for Lung Cancer Decision-Making in African
Americans
23. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, 2013-2018 ($3,235,743) 1R24HS022418 Co-Investigator and Stakeholder Engagement Core Leader: UT Southwestern Center of Patient-
Centered Outcomes Research (PCOR)
24. National Institutes of Health/National Cancer Institute, 2013-2018 ($1,423,461) R01CA178414
Co-Investigator: Developing a self-persuasion intervention promoting adolescent HPV vaccination
25. National Institutes of Health/NCATS, 2013-2018 ($19,650,711) UL1TR001105
Population Sciences Research Core Leader: UT Southwestern Center for Translational Medicine
26. National Institutes of Health/National Cancer Institute, 2010-2015 ($4,720,203) 5P30 CA142543
Associate Director and Population Sciences Research Program Leader: Cancer Center Support Grant
27. National Cancer Institute, 2014-2016 ($969,434) NCI U54 CA 163308-04S1
Principal Investigator (with Jasmin Tiro, PhD, MPH): Population-based Research Optimizing Cervical
Cancer Screening through Personalized Regimens (PROSPR): The Parkland-UT Southwestern PROSPR
Center
28. National Institutes of Health/National Cancer Institute, 2016-2015 ($4,720,203) 5P30 CA142543
Associate Director for Population Science: Cancer Center Support Grant
29. National Institutes of Health, 2015-2019 ($99,999) 1 K23 AG045287
End of Life Care Among Hospitalized African Americans
30. National Cancer Institute, 2016-2017 ($499,538) NCI U54 CA 163308-05S2
Principal Investigator (with Ethan Halm, MD, MPH): National survey on oncologist reimbursement &
EHR-based tools: Optimizing care delivery and trial accrual
b. Cancer Prevention Research Institute of Texas:
Prevention Grant ($998,000); Co-Investigator - Breast Screening and PAtient Navigation (BSPAN)
Prevention Grant ($349,000); Co-Investigator - Multicomponent Intervention Promoting HPV Vaccination
in Safety-net Clinics
Prevention Grant ($899,000); Co-Investigator - Increasing colorectal cancer screening in a safety-net health system with a focus on the uninsured: benefits and costs
Prevention Grant ($474,700); Co-Investigator – Randomized Controlled Trial (RCT) of Patient Navigation for Lung Cancer Screening in Urban safety-net system
c. Other 1. University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Biomedical Science Research Grant Award 1989 ($7,000)
Principal Investigator – Tailored patient prompts for mammography screening
2. Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center, Cancer Control Seed Grant Award 1989 ($4,000)
CS Skinner, CV 09/21/16
Principal Investigator – Relative effectiveness of tailored v. standard physician
recommendations for mammography
3. Indiana State Department of Health
Preventive Health/Health Services Block Grant Award 1992 ($51,000)
Principal Investigator – Increasing cancer-control activities in primary practice
4. Indiana University IUPUI Faculty Development Grant, 1992 ($5,000)
Co-Investigator – Factors affecting breast cancer screening participation
5. Washington University/American Cancer Society, 1996 ($10,700)
Co-Investigator – Prophylactic mastectomy: patient characteristics and adjustment
6. Mallinckrodt Medical, Inc., 1996-1998 ($30,000)
Principal Investigator – Genetic risk assessment counseling for breast cancer
7. Walther Cancer Research Institute, 1997-1999 ($115,000)
Principal Investigator – Genetic risk assessment counseling for colorectal cancer
8. Walther Cancer Research Institute, 1999-2001 ($300,000)
Principal Investigator – Development and feasibility testing of a Cancer Risk Intake System
9. Duke University Comprehensive Cancer Center, Prevention Pilot Grant Application,
2001-2002 ($15,000) Co-Investigator – The role of acculturation in predicting successful
outcomes for African Americans participating in the PREMIER study
10. The North Carolina Advisory Committee for Cancer Coordination & Control,
2004-2005 ($35,000) Co-Investigator – COPING – Clinical outreach program in genetics
11. Department of Defense, 2005-2008 ($3,000,000) W81XWH-05-1-0383
Co-Investigator – Guilford Genomic Medicine Initiative
12. Commercial Real Estate Women (CREW) 2008-2009 ($29,214)
Principal Investigator - Mothers’ Exposure and Reaction to Media Messages about the
HPV vaccine
13. National Institutes of Health/NCRR, 2009-2010, (47,868) 5UL1RR024982-03
Pilot Award of North and Central Texas Clinical Translational Science Initiative (CTSA)
Co- Investigator – Neighborhood change and physical activity: the Fair Park national experiment
14. National Institutes of Health/NCRR, 2009-2010, ($56,397) 5UL1RR024982-03 Pilot Award of North and Central Texas Clinical Translational Science Initiative (CTSA)
Co-Investigator - Evaluating Conceptual Equivalence of a HPV Vaccine and Media Exposure Survey
for Spanish and English-speaking Mothers
Bibliography:
a. Peer-reviewed publications:
1. Berend MJ, Sullivan DC, Kornguth P, Skinner CS, Iglehart JD & Skinner MA. The natural history
of mammographic calcifications subjected to interval follow-up. Archives of Surgery. Vol. 127, 1309-
1313, 1992.
2. Skinner CS, Siegfried J, Kegler MC & Strecher VJ. The potential for computers in patient education.
Patient Education & Counseling. Vol. 22(1), 27-34, 1993.
3. Skinner CS, Strecher VJ & Hospers H. Physician recommendations for mammography: Do tailored
messages make a difference? American Journal of Public Health. Vol. 84(1), 43-49, 1994.
CS Skinner, CV 09/21/16
4. Strecher VJ, Kreuter MW, den Boer DJ, Kobrin S, Hospers HJ & Skinner CS. The effects of
computer-tailored smoking cessation messages in family practice settings. Journal of Family
Practice. Vol. 39(3), 262-270, 1994.
5. Kreuter MW, Strecher VJ, Harris R, Kobrin SC & Skinner CS. Are patients of women physicians
screened more aggressively? A prospective study of physician gender and screening. Journal of
General Internal Medicine. Vol. 10(3), 119-125, 1995.
6. Swigonski NL, Skinner CS & Wolinsky FD. Maternal prenatal preventive health behaviors as
predictors of breast feeding, early childhood injury, and vaccination. Archives of Pediatric &
Adolescent Medicine. Vol. 149(4), 380-385, 1995.
7. Skinner CS, Zerr AD & Damson RL. Incorporating mobile mammography units into primary care:
Focus group interviews among inner-city health center patients. Health Education Research: Theory
& Practice. Vol. 10(2), 179-189, 1995.
8. Skinner CS, Champion VL, Gonin R & Hanna M. Do perceived barriers and benefits vary by
mammography stage? Psychology, Health & Medicine. Vol. 2(1), 65-75, 1997.
9. Champion VL, Skinner CS, Miller AG, Wagler KW & Goulet RH. Factors influencing effect of
mammography screening in a university workplace. Cancer Prevention & Detection. Vol. 21(3), 231-
241, 1997.
10. Skinner CS, Arfken CL & Sykes RK. Knowledge, perceptions, and mammography stage of adoption
among older urban women. American Journal of Preventive Medicine. Vol. 14(1), 54-63, 1998.
11. Skinner CS, Sykes RK, Monsees BS, Andriole DA, Arfken CL & Fisher EB. The LEARN, SHARE &
LIVE program: Breast cancer education for older, urban women. Health Education & Behavior. Vol.
25(1), 60-78, 1998.
12. Skinner CS, Kreuter MW, Kobrin S & Strecher VJ. Perceived and actual breast cancer risk:
Optimistic and pessimistic biases. Journal of Health Psychology. Vol. 3(2),181-194, 1998.
13. Chen CY, Neufeld P, Feely C & Skinner CS. Factors influencing adherence with home exercise
programs among patients with upper extremity impairment. American Journal of Occupational
Therapy. Vol. 53(2), 516-522, 1999.
14. Eisen S, Waterman B, Skinner CS, Scherrer J, Romeis JC, Bucholz K, Heath A, Goldberg J, Lyons M,
Tsuang MT & True W. Sociodemographic and health status characteristics associated with prostate
cancer screening in a national cohort of middle-aged males. Urology. Vol. 53(3), 516-522, 1999.
15. Ryan EL & Skinner CS. Risk beliefs and interest in counseling: Focus group interviews among first-degree
relatives of breast cancer patients. American Journal of Cancer Education. Vol. 14(2), 99-103, 1999.
16. Hovsepian DM, Steele JR, Skinner CS & Malden ES. Transrectal vs. transvaginal abscess drainage:
Survey of patient tolerance and impact on activities of daily living. Radiology. Vol. 212(1): 159-63, 1999.
17. Saywell R, Champion VL, Skinner CS, McQuillen D, Martin D & Maraj M. Cost-effectiveness
comparison of five interventions to increase mammography screening. Preventive Medicine. Vol. 29(5), 374-382, 1999.
18. Brennes G & Skinner CS. Psychological factors related to stage of mammography adoption. Journal
of Women’s Health & Gender-Based Medicine. Vol. 8(10), 1313-1321, 1999.
19. Bastian L, McBride C, Halibi S, Fish L, Lipkus I, Skinner CS, Rimer BK & Seigler I. Attitudes and
knowledge associated with being undecided about HRT: Results from a community sample.
Women’s Health Issues. Vol. 9(6), 330-337, 1999.
20. Skinner CS, Campbell MK, Rimer BK, Curry S & Prochaska JO. How effective is tailored print
communication? Annals of Behavioral Medicine. Vol. 21(4): 290-298, 1999.
CS Skinner, CV 09/21/16
21. Rawl SM, Menon U, Champion VL, Foster J & Skinner CS. Colorectal cancer screening beliefs:
Focus groups with first-degree relatives. Cancer Practice. Vol. 8(1): 32-37, 2000.
22. Clark S, Bluman LG, Borstelman N, Regan K, Winer EP, Rimer BK & Skinner CS. Satisfaction
with genetic counseling in decision making about BRCA1 and BRCA2 testing. Journal of Genetic
Counseling. 219-235, June, 2000.
23. Iglehart JD, Miron A, Skinner CS, Calingeart B, Rimer CK, Clark S & Schildkraut S. Testing for
hereditary breast and ovarian cancer in the southern United States. Annals of Surgery. Vol. 31(5):624-
634, 2000.
24. Skinner CS, Arfken CL & Waterman B. Outcomes from the LEARN, SHARE & LIVE breast cancer
education program for older, urban women. American Journal of Public Health. Vol. 90(8): 1229-1234,
2000.
25. Halabi S, Skinner CS, Samsa G, Strigo TS & Rimer BK. Factors associated with repeat
mammography screening. Journal of Family Practice, Vol. 49(12), 1104-1112, 2000.
26. Champion VL, Skinner CS, Foster JL. The effects of standard-care counseling or telephone/in-
person counseling on beliefs, knowledge, and behaviors related to mammography screening.
Oncology Nursing Forum, Vol. 27(10), 1565-1571, 2000.
27. Ryan GL, Skinner CS, Farrell D & Champion VL. Examining the boundaries of tailoring: The utility
of tailoring versus targeting mammography interventions for two distinct populations. Health
Education Research: Theory & Practice, Vol. 16(5), 555-566, 2001.
28. Rimer BK, Halabi S, Skinner CS, Crawford YS, Samsa G, Strigo T & Lipkus I. The short-term
impact of a mammography decision making intervention for women in their 40s and 50s. Patient
Education & Counseling, Vol. 43, 269-285, 2001.
29. Bastian LA, Lipkus IM, Kuchibhatla MN, Haoling WH, Halabi S, Ryan PD, Skinner CS & Rimer
BK. Women's interest in chemoprevention for breast cancer: Results from a community sample.
Archives of Internal Medicine, Vol. 161(13), 1639-1644, 2001.
30. Bosworth HB, Bastian LA, Kuchitbhatta MN, Steffens DC, McBride CM, Skinner CS, Rimer BK &
Siegler IC. Depressive symptoms, menopausal status, and climacteric symptoms in women at mid-
life. Psychosomatic Medicine, Vol. 63(4), 603-608, 2001.
31. Todora HS, Skinner CS, Gidday LL, Rawl S, Ivanovich J, Champion VL & Whelan A. Genetic risk
assessment counseling and education: Perceptions among first-degree relatives of colorectal cancer
patients and implications for health practitioners. Journal of Family Practice, Vol. 18(4), 367-372, 2001.
32. Rawl S, Champion VL, Menon U & Skinner CS. Validation of scales measuring benefits and
barriers to colorectal cancer screening. Journal of Psychosocial Oncology, Vol. 19(3/4), 2001.
33. Rimer BK, Halabi S, Skinner CS, Lipkus I, Strigo TS & Samsa G. Effects of a mammography
decision-making intervention at 12 and 24 months. American Journal of Preventive Medicine, Vol. 22(4), 247-257, 2002.
34. Champion VL, Skinner CS, Menon U, Seshadri R, Anzalone DC & Rawl S. Comparisons of tailored
mammography interventions at two months post intervention. Annals of Behavioral Medicine, Vol.
24(3), 211-218, 2002.
35. Skinner CS, Schildkraut JM, Berry D, Calingaert B, Marcom PK, Sugarman J, Winer EP, Iglehart
JD, Futreal & Rimer BK. Pre-Counseling education materials for BRCA testing: Does tailoring make
a difference? Genetic Testing, Vol. 6(2), 93-105, 2002.
CS Skinner, CV 09/21/16
36. Skinner CS, Champion VL, Menon U & Seshadri R. Race and education differences in
mammography-related perceptions among 1,336 non-adherent women. Journal of Psychosocial
Oncology, Vol. 20(3), 1-18, 2002.
37. Champion VL, Maraj M, Hui S, Perkins AJ, Tierney W, Menon U & Skinner CS. Comparison of
tailored interventions to increase mammography screening in non-adherent older women. Preventive
Medicine Vol. 36(2), 150-158, 2003.
38. Dominick K, Skinner CS, Bastian L, Bosworth H, Strigo TS & Rimer BK. The role of physician
specialty and gender in mammography recommendation. Journal of Women’s Health, Vol. 12(1), 61-
71, 2003.
39. Saywell RM, Champion VL, Zolinger TW, Maraj M, Skinner CS, Zoppi KA & Muegge CM. The
cost effectiveness of five interventions to increase mammography adherence in a HMO population.
American Journal of Managed Care, Vol. 9(1), 33-44, 2003.
40. Champion VL & Skinner CS. Differences in perceptions of risks, benefits, and barriers by stage of
mammography adoption. Journal of Women’s Health, Vol. 12(3), 277-286, 2003.
41. Skinner CS, Kreuter MW, Buchanan A, Holt C & Buckholtz D. Adaptation of tailored intervention
message libraries. Health Education, Vol. 103(4), 221-229, 2003.
42. Kreuter MW, Steger-May K, Bobra S, Booker A, Holt CL, Lukwago SN & Skinner CS. Socio-
cultural characteristics and responses to cancer education materials among African American women.
Cancer Control, Vol. 10(5 Suppl), 69-80, 2003.
43. Lukwago S, Kreuter MW, Holt C, Steger-May K, Bucholtz DC & Skinner CS. Sociocultural
correlates of breast cancer knowledge and screening in urban African American women. American
Journal of Public Health, Vol. 93(8), 1271-1274, 2003. PMCID:PMC1447952.
44. Lipkus IM, Samsa GP, Dement J, Skinner CS, Greene SG & Pompeii L. Accuracy of self-reports
of fecal occult blood tests and test results among individuals in the carpentry trade. Preventive
Medicine, Vol. 37(5), 513-519, 2003.
45. Kreuter MW, Skinner CS, Steger-May K, Holt CL, Bucholtz DC, Clark EM & Haire-Joshu D.
Responses to behaviorally vs. culturally tailored cancer communication among African American
women. American Journal of Health Behavior, Vol. 28(3), 195-207, 2004.
46. Lipkus IM, Skinner CS, Dement J, Samsa GP & Ransohoff D. Modifying attributions of colorectal
cancer risk. Cancer Epidemiology, Prevention & Biomarkers Vol. 13, 560-566, 2004.
47. Vadaparampil ST, Champion VL, Miller TK, Menon U, Skinner CS. Using the Health Belief Model
to examine differences in adherence to mammography among African-American and Caucasian
women. Journal of Psychosocial Oncology, Vol. 21(4); 59-79, 2004.
48. Champion VL, Skinner CS, Menon U, Rawl S, Monahan P & Fyfe J. A breast cancer fear scale:
Psychometric development. Journal of Health Psychology, Vol. 9(6); 753-762, 2004.
49. Kreuter MW, Holt C & Skinner CS. Awareness of mammography controversy among urban
African American women. Journal of Women’s Health, Vol. 13(1); 121-122, 2004.
50. Hughes C, Peterson SK, Rameriz AG, Gallion KJ, McDonald P, Skinner CS & Bowen D. Minority
recruitment in hereditary breast cancer research. Cancer Epidemiology, Prevention & Biomarkers,
Vol. 13(7); 2004.
51. Moorman PG, Skinner CS, Calingaert B, Evans JP, Hoyo C, Newman B, Sorenson JR &
Schildkraut JM. Racial differences in enrollment in a cancer genetics registry. Cancer
Epidemiology, Prevention & Biomarkers, Vol. 13: 1349-54, 2004.
CS Skinner, CV 09/21/16
52. Lipkus IM, Skinner CS, Dement J, Pompeii l, Moser B, Samsa G & Ransohoff D. Increasing
colorectal cancer screening among individuals in the carpentry trade: Test of risk communication
interventions. Preventive Medicine Vol. 37(5); 513-519, 2004.
53. Saywell R, Champion VL, Menon U, Daggy J & Skinner CS. A cost-effectiveness comparison of
three tailored interventions to increase mammography screening. Journal of Women's Health, Vol. 13(8); 909-918, 2004.
54. Rawl SM, Menon U, Champion VL, May FE, Loehrer P, Hunter C, Azzouz F, Monahan PO &
Skinner CS. Do benefits and barriers differ by stage of adoption for colorectal cancer screening?
Health Education Research: Theory & Practice, Vol. 20; 137-148, 2005.
55. Buchanan AH, Skinner CS, Rawl RM, Moser BK, Champion VL, Scott LL, Strigo TS & Bastian
LA. Patients’ interest in discussing cancer risk and risk management with primary care physicians.
Patient Education & Counseling, Vol. 57(1); 77-87, 2005.
56. Hoyo C, Ostbye T, Skinner CS, Yarnall K & Chowdhary J. Reproducibility of self-reported pap test
utilization in middle-aged African American women. Ethnicity & Disease, Vol. 15; 84-89, 2005.
57. Bosworth HB, Bastian LA, McBride CM, Skinner CS, Lipkus IM, Fish L, Rimer BK & Siegler IC.
Initiation and discontinuation of estrogen therapy for menopausal symptoms: Results from a
community sample. Journal of Behavioral Medicine, Vol. 28(1); 105-114, 2005.
58. Skinner CS, Rawl SM, Moser BK, Buchanan AH, Scott LL, Champion VL, Schildkraut J,
Parmigiani G, Clark S, Lobach D & Bastian L. Impact of the Cancer Risk Intake System on patient-
physician discussions of tamoxifen, genetic counseling and colonoscopy. Journal of General
Internal Medicine, Vol. 20(4); 360-365, 2005. PMCID:PMC1490091
59. Kreuter MW, Skinner CS, Holt CL, Clark EM, Haire-Joshu D, Fu Q, Booker AC, Steger-May K &
Bucholtz D. Cultural tailoring for mammography and fruit and vegetable intake among low-income
African American women in urban public health centers. Preventive Medicine, Vol. 41; 53-62, 2005.
60. Hoyo C, Skinner CS, Yarnall K, Sellers D & Reid L. Perceived discomfort predicts non-adherence
to pap smear screening among middle-aged African American women. Preventive Medicine, Vol. 41(2); 439-445, 2005.
61. Ard J, Skinner CS, Chen C, Aickin M & Svetkey LP. Informing cancer prevention strategies for
African Americans: The relationship of African American acculturation to fruit, vegetable, and fat
intake. Journal of Behavioral Medicine, Vol. 28(3); 239-247, 2005.
62. Lipkus IM, Klein WMP, Skinner CS & Rimer BK. Breast cancer risk perceptions and breast
cancer worry: What predicts what? Journal of Risk Research, Vol.8(5); 439-352, 2005.
63. Champion VL, Menon U & Skinner CS. Development of a self-efficacy scale for mammography
Research Nursing Health, Vol. 28; 329-36, 2005.
64. Russell MK, Champion VL, Skinner CS. Psychosocial factors related to repeat mammography
screening over five years in African American women. Cancer Nursing, Vol.29(3); 236-243, 2006.
65. Koropchak CM, Pollak KI, Arnold R, Alexander S, Skinner CS, Olsen M, Jeffreys A, Rodriguez
KL, Abernethy AP & Tulsky JA. Studying communication in oncologist-patient encounters: The
SCOPE trial. Palliative Medicine, Vol. 20; 813-819, 2006.
66. Skinner CS, Champion VL, Monahan P, Fyfe J, Kobrin SC & Todora HS. Tailored interventions
for screening mammography: When is a booster dose important? Patient Education & Counseling,
Vol.65(1); 87-94, 2006.
CS Skinner, CV 09/21/16
67. Menon U, Champion VL, Monahan PO, Daggy J, Hui S & Skinner CS. Health Belief Model
variables as predictors of progression in stage of mammography adoption. American Journal of
Health Promotion, Vol.21(4); 255-261, 2007. PMCID:PMC3046551
68. Menon U, Belue R, Skinner CS, Rothwell E & Champion VL. Perceptions of colon cancer screening
by stage of screening test adoption. Cancer Nursing. Vol.30(3); 1-8, 2007.
69. Champion VL, Skinner CS, Siu L. Hui SL O. Monahan PO, Juliar BE, Daggy JK, Menon U. The
effect of telephone v. print tailoring for mammography adherence. Patient Education & Counseling,
Vol. 65; 416-423, 2007. PMCID:PMC1858664
70. DeFrank JT, Bowling JM, Rimer BK, Gierisch JM & Skinner CS. Triangulating differential non-
response by race in a telephone survey. Preventing Chronic Diseases, 4(3):A60, 2007. Available
from: http://www.cdc.gov/pcd/issues/2007/jul/06_0102.htm. PMCID:PMC1955404.
71. Pollak KI, Arnold RM, Jeffreys AS, Alexander SC, Olsen MK, Abernethy AP, Skinner CS,
Rodrigues KI, Tulsky JA. Oncologist communication about emotion during visits with advanced
cancer patients. Journal of Clinical Oncology, Vol. 26(36); 5748-5752, 2007.
72. Rawl SM, Champion VL, Scott LL, Zhou H, Monahan P, Ding Y, Loehrer P & Skinner CS. A
randomized trial of two print interventions to increase colon cancer screening among first-degree
relatives. Patient Education & Counseling, Vol. 71(2); 215-227, 2008. PMCID:PMC2492833
73. Skinner CS, Schildkraut J, Calingaert B, Hoyo C, Crankshaw SS, Fish L, Susswein L, Jasper C, &
Reid L. Factors associated with African Americans' enrollment in a cancer genetics registry.
Community Genetics, Vol. 11(4), 224-233, 2008. PMID:18417970
74. O’Neill SC, Bowling JM, Brewer NT, Lipkus IM, Skinner CS, Strigo TS & Rimer BK. Intentions to
maintain adherence to mammography. Journal of Women’s Health, Vol 17(7), 1133-41, 2008.
PMCID:PMC2575244
75. Ahn C, Hu F & Skinner CS. Effect of imbalance and intra-cluster correlation coefficient in cluster
randomized trials with binary outcomes. Computational Statistics and Data Analysis, Vol. 53(3), 596-
602, 2009. PMCID:PMC2747741
76. Buchanan AH, Skinner CS, Calingaert B. Schildkraut JM, King RH & Marcom PK. Cancer genetic
counseling in rural North Carolina oncology clinics: program establishment and patient
characteristics. Community Oncology, Vol. 6(2), 70-77, 2009.
77. Spector D, Mishel M, Skinner CS, DeRoo LA, Vanriper M & Sandler DP. Breast cancer risk
perception and lifestyle behaviors among white and black women with a family history of the disease.
Cancer Nursing, Vol. 32(4), 299-308, 2009. PMCID: PMC2814775
78. DeFrank JT, Rimer BK, Gierisch JM, Bowling M, Farrell D & Skinner CS. Impact of mailed and
automated telephone reminders on receipt of repeat mammograms. American Journal of Preventive
Medicine, Vol. 36 (6), 459-467, 2009. PMCID:PMC2698939
79. Ahn C, Hu, F, Skinner CS & Ahn D. Effect of imbalance and intra-cluster correlation coefficient in
cluster randomization trials with binary outcomes when the available number of clusters is fixed in
advance. Contemporary Clinical Trials, Vol. 30(4), 317-320, 2009. PMCID: PMC2716697
80. Gierisch JM, O’Neill SC, Rimer BK, DeFrank JT, Bowling JM, & Skinner CS. Factors associated
with annual-interval mammography for women in their 40s. Cancer Epidemiology, 33(1); 78-86, 2009.
PMCID:PMC2727566.
81. Rasco DW, Xie Y, Jan Y, Sayne JR, Skinner CS, Dowell JE & Gerber DE. The impact of
consenter characteristics and experience on patient interest in clinical research. The Oncologist,
Vol. 14(5): 468-75, 2009. PMID:19401521
CS Skinner, CV 09/21/16
82. Gupta S, Tong L, Allison JE, Carter E, Koch M, Rockey DC, Anderson P, Ahn C, Argenbright K,
& Skinner CS. Screening for colorectal cancer in a safety-net healthcare system: Access to care is
critical and has implications for screening policy. Cancer Epidemiology, Biomarkers & Prevention,
18(9); 2373-9, 2009. PMCID:PMC2767330
83. Skinner CS, Pollak KI, Farrell D, Olsen MK, Jeffreys AS & Tulsky JA. Use of and reactions to a
tailored interactive CD ROM designed to enhance oncologist-patient communication: the SCOPE trial
intervention. Patient Education & Counseling, Vol 77(1); 90-96, 2009. PMCID: PMC2841286
84. Gierisch JM, DeFrank JT, Bowling JM, Rimer BK, Matuszewski JM, Farrell D & Skinner CS.
Finding the minimal intervention needed for sustained mammography adherence. American Journal
of Preventive Medicine, Vol. 39(4);334-344, 2010. PMCID: PMC2939860
85. Skinner CS, Buchanan AH, Champion VL, Monahan P, Rawl S, Springston J, Bourff S. Process
outcomes from a randomized controlled trial comparing tailored mammography interventions
delivered via telephone versus DVD. Patient Education & Counseling , Vol. 85(2):308-12, 2010.
PMCID:PMC3136570.
86. Bishop WP, Tiro JA, Lee SC, Bruce CM & Skinner CS. Community events as viable sites for
recruiting minority volunteers who agree to be contacted for future research. Contemporary Clinical
Trials, Vol. 32, (3); 369-371, 2011. PMID: 21276875
87. Tulsky JA, Arnold RM, Alexander SC, Olsen, MK, Jeffreys AS, Rodriguez KL, Skinner CS, Farrell
D, Abernethy AP & Pollak KI. Enhancing communication between oncologists and patients with a
computer-based training program: A randomized trial. Annals of Internal Medicine, Vol 155(9); 593-
601, 2011. PMCID: PMC3368370
88. Lee SJC, Tiro JA, Bishop WP, Sheppard PD & Skinner CS. Legitimate and ethical: Distinguishing
when and how regulations apply in patient-oriented research. American Journal of Bioethics, Vol. 11(11):42-3, 2011. PMID:22047126
89. Tiro JA, Pruitt SL, Bruce CM, Persaud D, Lau M, Vernon SW, Morrow J, & Skinner CS. Multilevel correlates for human papillomavirus vaccination of adolescent girls attending safety net clinics. Vaccine, Vol. 30(13); 2368-2375, 2012. PMID: 22108490
90. Singal AG, Yopp A, Skinner CS, Packer M, Lee WM, & Tiro JA. Utilization of hepatocellular carcinoma surveillance among American patients. A systematic review. Journal of General Internal Medicine, Vol. 27(7); 861-867, 2012 PMID: 22215266
91. Gerber DE, Rasco DW, Skinner CS, Dowell JE, Yan J, Sayne JR, & Xie Y. Consent timing and experience: Modifiable factors that may influence interest in clinical research. Journal of Oncology Practice, Vol. 8(2):91-
6,2012. PMCID:PMC3457835.
92. Singal AG, Yopp A, Gupta S, Skinner CS, Halm E, Okolo E, Nehra M, Lee WM, Marrero JA, & Tiro JA.
Failure rates in the hepatocellular carcinoma surveillance process. Cancer Prevention Research, Vol. 5(9);
1124-1130, 2012. PMCID:PMC3435471.
93. Rawl SM, Skinner CS, Perkins SM, Springston J, Wang HL, Russell KM, Tong Y, Gebregziabher N, Krier
C, Smith-Howell E, Brady-Watts T, Myers LJ, Ballard D, Rhyant B, Willis, DR, Imperiale TF, & Champion
VL. Computer-delivered tailored intervention improves colon cancer screening knowledge and health beliefs
of African Americans. Health Education Research: Theory and Practice, Vol. 27(5):868-85, 2012.
PMCID:PMC3442380.
94. Hamann HA, Robinson LD, Moldrem AW, Golden EP, Mook JA, Bishop WP, Skinner CS & Euhus DM.
BRCA1/2 Testing and cancer risk management among underserved women at a public hospital. Community
Oncology, Vol. 9(12), 369-376, 2012.
95. Shuval K, Leonard T, Caughy M, Murdoch J, Kohl HW & Skinner CS. Sedentary behaviors and
obesity among a low-income, ethnic-minority population. American Journal of Physical Activity &
Health, Vol. 10(1);132-136, 2013. PMCID:PMC3597085
CS Skinner, CV 09/21/16
96. Shuval K, Chiu CY, Barlow CE, Gabriel KP, Kendzor DE, Businelle MS, Skinner CS, & Balasubramanian
BA. Family history of chronic disease and meeting public health guidelines for physical activity: The Cooper
Center Longitudinal Study. Mayo Clin Proc. 2013 88(6):588-92. doi: 10.1016/j.mayocp.2013.04.006
97. Christy SM, Perkins SM, Tong Y, Krier C, Champion VL, Skinner CS, Springston JF, Imperiale TF, & Rawl
SM. Promoting colorectal cancer screening discussion: A randomized controlled trial. American Journal of
Preventive Medicine, Vol. 44(4), 325-329, 2013. PMCID: PMC3601582
98. Orlando LA, Buchanan AH, Hahn SE, Christianson CA, Powell KP, Skinner CS, Chesnut B, Blach C, Due
B, Ginsburg GS & Henrich VC. Development and validation of a primary care-based family health history
and decision support program (MeTree). North Carolina Medical Journal, Vol. 74(4), 287-296, 2013.
99. Shuval K, Wright B, Gabriel KP, Kendzor D, Musinelle M, Skinner CS & Balasubramanian B. Family
history of chronic disease and meeting public health guidelines for physical activity: The Cooper Center
Longitudinal Study. Mayo Clinic Proceedings, 2013 Jun;88(6):588-92. PMID:23726398
100. Gupta S, Tong L, Anderson P, Rose B, Carter E, Koch M, Argenbright K, Ahn C, Allison J, & Skinner CS.
Measurement of colorectal cancer test use with medical claims data in a safety-net health system. American
Journal of Medical Sciences, Vol. 345(2); 99-103, 2013 PMCID:PMC 3479334.
101. Leonard T, Shuval K, de Oliveira A, Skinner CS, Eckel C & Murdoch J. Health behavior and behavioral
economics: Economic preferences and physical activity stages of change in a low-income African American
community. American Journal of Health Promotion, Vol. 27(4); 211-21, 2013. PMCID:PMC4225127
102. Gupta S, Halm EA, Rockey DC, Hammons M, Koch M, Carter E, Valdez L, Tong L, Ahn C, Kashner M,
Argenbright K, Tiro J, Geng Z, Pruitt S & Skinner CS. Comparative effectiveness of fecal immunochemical
test outreach, colonoscopy outreach, and usual care for boosting colorectal cancer screening among the
underserved: A randomized trial. JAMA Internal Medicine 2013; 173(18):1725-1732.
103. Shuval K, Hebert ET, Siddiqi Z, Leonard T, Lee SC, Tiro JA, McCallister K & Skinner CS. Impediments
and facilitators to physical activity and perceptions of sedentary behavior among urban community residents:
The Fair Park study. Preventing Chronic Disease, 2013 Oct 31;10:E177. doi: 10.5888/pcd10.130125. PMCID:
PMC3816600
104. Shuval K, Leonard T, Caughy M, Murdoch J, Kohl HW, & Skinner CS. Sedentary behaviors and obesity
among a low-income, ethnic-minority, population. American Journal of Physical Activity & Health 2013;10(1):132-6. PMCID:PMC3597085
105. Shuval K, DiPietro L, Skinner CS, Barlow CE, Morrow J, Goldsteen R, & Kohl HW. Sedentary behavior
counseling - the next step in lifestyle counseling in primary care; pilot findings from the Rapid Assessment
Disuse Index (RADI) study. British Journal of Sports Medicine, 48(19):1451-1455, 2014.
PMCID:PMC4229046
106. Wang HL, Christy SM, Skinner CS, Champion VL, Springston JK, Perkins SM, Tong Y, Krier C,
Gebregziabher N, & Rawl SM. Predictors of stage of adoption for colorectal cancer screening among African
American primary-care patients. Cancer Nursing, 2014; 37(4);241-51. PMCID: PMC3991768
107. Tiro JA, Kamineni A, , Levin TR, Zheng Y, Schottinger JS, Rutter CM, Corley DA, Skinner CS, Chubak J,
Doubeni CA, Halm EA, Gupta S, Wernli KJ, & Klabunde C. The CRC screening process in community
settings: A conceptual model for the Population-based Research Optimizing Screening through Personalized
Regimens (PROSPR) Consortium. Cancer Epidemiology, Prevention & Biomarkers, 2014; 23(7):1147-58.
PMCID: PMC4148641
108. Champion VL, Rawl SM, Bourff SA, Champion KM, Smith LG, Buchanan AH, Fish LJ, Monahan PO,
Stump TE, Springston JK, Gathirua-Mwangi WG & Skinner CS. Randomized trial of DVD, telephone, and
usual care for increasing mammography adherence. Journal of Health Psychology. 2014 Jul 28. pii:
1359105314542817. (PMID:25070967)
CS Skinner, CV 09/21/16
109. Bishop WP, Tiro JA, Sanders JM, Lee SJC, & Skinner CS. Effectiveness of a community research registry to
recruit minorities and underserved adults for health research. Clinical & Translational Science 2015; 8(1):82-
84. PMID: 25354322
110. Buchanan AH, Datta SK, Skinner CS, Hollowell GP, Beresford HF, Freeland T, Rogers B, Boling J, Marcom
PK & Adams MB. Randomized trial of telegenetics vs. in-person cancer genetic counseling: Cost, patient
satisfaction, and attendance. Journal of Genetic Counseling 2015, PMID:25833335.
111. Skinner CS, Halm EA, Bishop WP, Ahn C, Gupta S, Farrell D, Morrow J, Julka M, McCallister K, Sanders
JM, Marks E & Rawl S. Impact of risk assessment and tailored versus nontailored risk information on
colorectal cancer testing in primary care: A randomized controlled trial. Cancer Epidemiology Biomarkers &
Prevention. 2015; 24(10):1523-1530. PMID: 26265201
112. Tiro JA, Sanders JM, Pruitt SL, Stevens CF, Skinner CS, Bishop WP, Fuller S & Persaud D. Promoting HPV
vaccination in safety-net clinics: A randomized trial. Pediatrics; 2015; 136(5).
113. Kahn B, Freeland Z, Gopal P, Agrawal D, Mayorga CA, Mithani R, Skinner CS, Halm EA, Singal AG.
Predictors of guideline concordance for surveillance colonoscopy recommendations among patients in a
safety-net health system. Cancer Causes & Control. 2015; 26:1653-1660.
114. Singal AG, Gupta S, Tiro JA, Skinner CS, McCallister K, Sanders JM, Bishop WP, Agrawal D, Mayorga C,
Ahn C, Loewen A, Santini N & Halm EA. Outreach invitations for FIT and colonoscopy improve colorectal
cancer screening rates: A randomized controlled trial in a safety-net health system. Cancer. 2015; PMID:
26535565
115. Tiro JA, Lee SC, Marks EG, Persuad D, Skinner CS, Street RL, Wiebe DJ, Farrell D, Bishop WP Fuller S
Baldwin A. Developing a tablet-based self-persuasion intervention promoting adolescent HPV vaccination:
Protocol for a three-stage mixed-methods study. JMIR Research Protocols. 2016 Jan 29;5(1):e19. PMID:
26825137
116. Skinner CS, Gupta S, Halm EA, Wright S, McCallister K, Bishop WP, Santini N, Mayorga C, Agrawal D,
Moran B, Sanders JM & Singal A. Development of the Parkland-UT Southwestern Colonoscopy Reporting
System (CoRS) for evidence-based colon cancer surveillance recommendations. Journal of the American
Medical Informatics Association 2016, PMID: 26254481
117. Rhodes R, Elwood B, Lee SJC, Tiro J, Halm EA & Skinner CS. The desires of their hearts: The
multidisciplinary perspectives of African Americans on end-of-life care in the African American community.
American Journal of Hospice & Palliative Medicine. 2016. DOI: 10.1177/1049909116631776
118. Gathirua-Mwangi WG, Monahan P, Stump T, Rawl SM, Skinner CS & Champion VL. Mammography
adherence in African American women: Results of a randomized controlled trial. Annals of Behavioral
Medicine. 2016; 50(1);70-8. PMID: 26416127
119. Bishop WP, Lee SJC, Skinner CS, Marks EG, McCallister K, Sanders JM, Tiro JA. Evaluating validity of
health literacy items in English and Spanish speakers. American Journal of Public Health. 2016; May(0):e1-4.
120. de Oliveira AC, Leonard TCM, Shuval K, Skinner CS, Eckel C & Murdoch JC. Economic preferences and
obesity among a low-income African American community. In press, Journal of Economic Behavior &
Organization.
121. Mehta SJ, Burnett-Hartman AN, Sheng Y, Ghai NR, McLerran D, Chubak J, Quinn VP, Skinner CS, Corley
DA, Inadomi J, Doubeni CA. Racial/ethnic disparities in colorectal cancer screening across healthcare
systems: PROSPR 2010-2012. American Journal of Preventive Medicine. 2016 Apr 1. PMID: 27050413
[Epub ahead of print]
122. Edmond SN, Shelby R, Keefe F, Schmidt J, Fisher HM, Soo MS, Skinner CS, Ahrendt GM, Manculich J,
Sumkin J, Zuley ML, Bovbjerg DH. Persistent breast pain among women with histories of breast conserving
surgery for breast cancer compared to women without histories of breast surgery or cancer. In press, Clinical
Journal of Pain.
CS Skinner, CV 09/21/16
123. McCarthy, AM, Kim J, Beaber EF, Zheng Y, Kim J, Burnett-Hartman A, Chubak J, Ghai NR, Lerran D,
Breen N, Conant EF, Geller EM, Green BB, Klabunde C, Inrig S, Skinner CS, Quinn VP, Haas J, Schnall M,
Rutter C, Balrow W, Corley DA, Armstrong K, Doubeni CA. Follow-up of abnormal breast and colorectal
cancer screening by race/ethnicity. American Journal of Preventive Medicine. 2016
doi:10.1016/j.amepre.2016.03.017
124. Skinner CS, Gupta S, Bishop WP, Ahn C, Tiro JA, Halm EA, Farrell D, Marks E, Morrow J, Julka M,
McCallister K, Sanders JM, Rawl SM. Tailored information increases patient/physician discussion of colon
cancer risk and testing: The Cancer Risk Intake System trial. Preventive Medicine Reports, 2016;(4):6-10.
125. Buchanan AH, Schildkraut JM, Voils CI, Fine C, Horick N, Marcom PK, Siggins K & Skinner CS.
Adherence to recommended risk management among unaffected women with a BRCA mutation. Journal of
Genetic Counseling, 2016; 1-14. PMID: 27265406 [Epub ahead of print].
126. Gupta S, Miller S, Koch M, Berry E, Anderson P, Pruitt S, Borton E, Hughes A, Carter E, Hernandez S, Cruz
H, Halm EA, Gneez A, Lieberman A, Skinner CS, Argenbright KE & Balasubramanian B. Financial
incentive for promoting colorectal cancer screening: A randomized, comparative effectiveness trial. In press,
American Journal of Gastroenterology.
127. Shay LA, Street RL, Baldwin AS, Marks EG, Lee SC, Higashi RT, Skinner CS, Fuller S, Persaud D & Tiro
JA. Characterizing safety-net providers’ HPV vaccine recommendations to undecided parents: A pilot study.
In press, Patient Education & Counseling.
b. Letters to the editor
Kreuter MW & Skinner CS. Tailoring: What's in a name? Health Education Research: Theory &
Practice, Vol. 15 (1), 1-4, 2000.
Kreuter MW & Skinner CS. Tailoring: Response to Pasick. Health Education Research: Theory &
Practice, Vol. 16 (41), 507-508, 2001.
c. Manuscripts under review:
1. Rawl SM, Perkins SM, Tong Y, Christy SM, Krier C, Wang HL, Huang AM, Smith-Howell E, Russell K,
Rhyant B, Lloyd F, Willis DR, Imperiale TF, Myers LJ, Springston J, Champion VL & Skinner CS.
Randomized controlled trial of a computer-tailored intervention that increased colorectal cancer screening
in low-income African Americans. Under review, Annals of Internal Medicine
2. Lee SJC, Inrig SJ, Balasubramanian B, Skinner CS, Higashi RT, McCallister K, Bishop WP, Santini NO &
Tiro JA. Qualitative methods identify opportunities for improving colorectal cancer screening completion.
Under review, Health Services Research
3. Beaber EF, Tosteson A, Haas J, Onega T, Sprague BL, Weaver DL, McCarthy AM, Doubeni CA, Quinn V,
Skinner CS, Zauber A & Barlow WE, on behalf of the PROSPR Consortium. Breast cancer screening
initiation after turning 40 years of age and patterns of recall among first-time screeners within the PROSPR
consortium. Under 2nd review, Breast Cancer Research and Treatment
4. Balasubramanian BA, Garcia MP, Corley DA, Doubeni CA, Hass JS, Kamineni A, Wernli K, Quinn V,
Zheng Y & Skinner CS. Racial/ethnic differences in obesity and comorbidities between safety-net and
non-safety-net integrated health systems. Under review, Medical Care
5. Turer CB, Barlow SE, Sarwer DB, Adamson MS. Sanders J, Ahn C, Flores G & Skinner CS. Primary-care
clinical practices associated with weight-status improvement in school-age children with overweight and
obesity. Under review, JAMA Pediatrics
6. Baldwin A. Tiro JA, Marks E, Denmen A, Sala M, Shay LA, Fuller S, Persaud D, Lee SC, Skinner CS,
Farrell D & Wiebe D. Translating self-persuasion into an adolescent HPV vaccine promotion intervetnion
for parents attending safety-net clinics. Under 2nd review, Patient Education & Counseling
CS Skinner, CV 09/21/16
7. Skinner CS, Ahn C, Halm EA, McCallister K, Sanders J, Santini NO, Farrell D & Singal AG. Colorectal
cancer testing among primary care patients younger than 50 with elevated risk. Under review, Annals of
Family Medicine
Papers under development:
1. Turer CB, Ramirez C, Singal A, Skinner CS, Barlow SE. Prevalence of primary care non-alcoholic fatty
liver disease screening among children with overweight and obesity.
2. Breen N, Zheng Y, Klabunde C, Beaber EF, Skinner CS, Doubeni CA, Garcia M, Hass J, Li C, Chubak J,
Wernli K, Corley D, Quinn V & Inrig S. Follow-up after colorectal cancer screening: A comparison of
patients’ insurance coverage type.
3. Puzziferri N, Sala M, Hynan L, Skinner CS & Brandon AR. Perceptions of Bariatric Survey measure
(PBS): Developed to inform peri-operative weight loss treatment.
c. Published Abstracts
1. Skinner CS, Tiro JT, Bishop WP, Bruce C & Goodall K. Factors associated with community members’
participation in a research registry. Proceedings of the American Association for Cancer Research, 2009
2. Rawl S, Skinner CS, Champion V, Springston J, Perkins S, Tong Y, Gebregziabher N, Krier C,
Rhyant B, Russell K, Imperiale T, Willis D, & Jones Myers L Predictors of readiness to screen
for colorectal cancer in primary care patients (abstract). Annals of Oncology 21 (Suppl 6): vi31-
vi121, 2010
3. Rawl SM, Skinner CS, Champion VL, Springston J, Perkins S, Tong Y, Gebregziabher N, Krier C,
Rhyant B, Russell K, Imperiale T, Willis D, Myers LM. Predicting stage of readiness to screen for
colorectal cancer among African Americans (abstract). International Journal of Behavioral
Medicine 17 (Suppl 1): S167-S168, 2010
4. Krier CJ, Skinner CS, Champion VL, Springston J, Perkins SM., Tong Y, Gebregziabher N, Imperiale TF,
Brady-Watts T, Myers LJ, Rawl SM, A computer-tailored intervention increases patient-provider
discussion and appointment making for colorectal cancer screening (abstract). Proceedings of the American
Association for Cancer Research, Volume 52, 2011
5. Shelby RA, Keefe FJ, See MS, Skinner CS, Stinnett S. Luce MF, Zuley ML, Sumkin JOH, Bovbjerg DH.
Psychological factors associated with self-reported breast pain prior to routine mammography in breast
cancer survivors and women without a history of cancer. Annals of Behavioral Medicine, 2011;41(1);
S160-S160
6. Skinner CS, Bishop WP, Tong LY, Rawl S, Tiro JA, Julka M, Morrow J, Gupta S. The Cancer Risk
Intake System preliminary outcomes. Annals of Behavioral Medicine, 2011;41(1) S830S83
7. McCarthy, AM, Kim J, Beaber EF, Zheng Y, Kim J, Burnett-Hartman A, Chubak J, Ghai NR, CmLerran
D, Breen N, Conant EF, Geller EM, Green BB, Klabunde C, Inrig S, Skinner CS, Quinn VP, Haas J,
Schnall M, Rutter C, Balrow W, Corley DA, Armstrong K, Doubeni CA. Timely follow-up of abnormal
screening by race and ethnicity across cancer types and healthcare delivery systems: comparison of breast
and colorectal cancer screening processes (abstract). International Cancer Screening Network.
8. Singal AG, Gupta S, Tiro JA, Skinner CS, McCallister K, Sanders JM, Bishop WP, Agrawal D, Mayorga
C, Ahn C, Loewen A, Santini N & Halm EA. Outreach invitations for FIT and colonoscopy improve
colorectal cancer screening rates: A randomized controlled trial in a safety-net health system.
Gastroenterology, 2015.
CS Skinner, CV 09/21/16
d. Textbooks (authored/edited):
1. TAILORING HEALTH MESSAGES: CUSTOMIZING COMMUNICATION WITH COMPUTER
TECHNOLOGY, Volume 2. Kreuter MW, Farrell D, Jacobson H & Skinner CS (Authors). Lawrence
Erlbaum Associates, Publishers, Mahwah, NJ, 2013
e. Invited book chapters:
1. Skinner CS & Kreuter MW. Using theories in planning interactive computer programs. In Health
Promotion and Interactive Technology: Theoretical Applications and Future Directions, Street RL, Gold
WR, & Manning T (Eds.). Lawrence Erlbaum Publishers, 1997.
2. Monsees BS & Skinner CS. Screening mammography from theory to practice. In Diagnosis of Diseases
of the Breast, Bassett LW & VP Jackson, (Eds.). WB Saunders, 1997.
3. Skinner CS. Cancer Control and Aging. In The Encyclopedia of Aging, GL Maddox (Ed.). Springer
Publishing, 2000.
4. Skinner CS & Giesler RB. Decision aids for cancer-related behavioral choices. In Evidence-Based
Behavioral Interventions in Oncology – State of the Knowledge across the Cancer Care Continuum. CW
Givens & BA Givens (Ed.) Springer Publishing, 2003.
5. Champion VL, Rawl S & Skinner CS. Interventions for cancer screening. In Evidence-Based
Behavioral Interventions in Oncology – State of the Knowledge across the Cancer Care Continuum. CW
Givens & BA Givens (Ed.) Springer Publishing, 2003.
6. Skinner CS, Kobrin SC, Campbell MC & Sutherland L. The role of advanced technology in adherence
interventions. In, Patient treatment adherence: Concepts, interventions, and measurement. Bosworth
HB, Oddone EZ, Weinberger M (eds). Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Mahwah, NJ, 2005.
7. Champion VL & Skinner CS. The Health Belief Model. In, Health Education Theory & Practice (4th
Edition). Glanz K, Rimer BK & Viswanath K (Eds) Jossey-Bass Publishers, San Francisco, 2008.
8. Skinner CS. Tailored Communications. In, Encyclopedia of Behavioral Medicine. Gellman,MD &
Turner,RJ (Eds) Springer-Verlaq New York, 2012.
9. Skinner CS, Tiro JA & Champion VL. The Health Belief Model. In, Health Behavior: Theory,
Research, and Practice (5th Edition). Glanz K, Rimer BK & Viswanath K (Eds) Jossey-Bass Publishers,
San Francisco, 2015.
10. Taplin S, Abdiwahab E, Skinner CS, Dacus H, Leypoldt M, & Coronado G. Early Detection. In,
Oncology Informatics: Using health information technology to improve processes and outcomes in cancer
(1st Edition). Hesse B, Ahern D & Beckkjord E (Eds) Elsevier Publishers, 2016.
g. Invited talks:
1. NCI project to improve compliance in United Kingdom trial of breast cancer screening among younger
women. Institute for Cancer Research, Royal Marsden Hospital, Surrey Sutton, England, Aug, 1994
2. Tailored communications for breast cancer screening promotion. Tailored messages in cancer
communications workgroup meeting, Bethesda, MD, July, 1996
3. Tailored communications for cancer control: Results of randomized trials. Grand Rounds, Duke
University Department of Surgery, Durham, NC, May 2001
4. Tailored communications for behavior change. University of North Carolina conference on tailored
communications, Chapel Hill, NC, November 2004
CS Skinner, CV 09/21/16
5. Tailored interventions: Historical development & lessons learned. Midwest Nursing Research Society,
St. Louis, MO, February 2004
6. Tailored communications for behavior change. School of Nursing and Public Health, University of
Kwazulu-Natal, Durban, South Africa, June 2005
7. Health communications research in various settings. Research Seminar in Clinical Sciences, UT
Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas TX, Sept 2006
8. Health communications research in various settings. St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital and Cancer
Center, Memphis, TN, October 2006
9. Tailored interventions for mammography promotion delivered through multiple media. 2nd NCI
Workgroup for Computerized Tailored Interventions, Providence, RI, Aug 2007
10. Addressing breast cancer disparities through multiple intervention channels. University of North Texas
School of Public Health Health Disparities Conference, Ft. Worth, TX, May 2009
11. NIH reviewing circa 2010: Reviewers’ & applicants’ perspectives. National Cancer Institute’s
Advanced Theory Institute, Madison, WI, July 2010
12. Tailored interventions for cancer screening. The Ohio State University James Cancer Center,
Columbus, OH, May 2011
13. What do we do with our findings? Implications for theory & practice. National Cancer Institute’s
Advanced Theory Institute, Madison, WI, July 2012
14. Is newer better? Technology to promote cancer screening among various populations. American
Association for Cancer Research Frontiers in Cancer Prevention Research, Washington DC, Nov 2012
15. Cancer prevention and control in urban safety nets and rural populations. Washington University
Siteman Comprehensive Cancer Center, St. Louis, MO, March 2013
16. Cancer prevention and control in urban safety nets and rural populations. Duke Cancer Institute,
Durham, NC, April 2013
17. Cancer prevention and control in urban safety nets and rural populations. UT MD Anderson Cancer
Center, Houston, TX, June 2013
18. Population Research at the Harold C. Simmons Cancer Center, UT System Cancer Centers Meeting,
Austin, TX, Aug 2014
19. The UT Southwestern Simmons Comprehensive Cancer Center’s research program in population
sciences and cancer control. American Society of Preventive Oncology Associate Directors for
Population Sciences conference, Birmingham, AL, March 2015
20. Partnering with safety-net health systems to control cancer: The UTSW experience. University of New
Mexico Comprehensive Cancer Center, Alburquerque, NM, June 2015
21. The Epic-based Parkland-UT Southwestern Colonoscopy Reporting System (CoRS). IEEE International
Conference on Healthcare Informatics (ICHI), Dallas, TX, October 2015
CS Skinner, CV 09/21/16
22. Eliminating disparities in colorectal cancer. National Cancer Institute Think Tank for Cancer
Disparities, Atlanta, GA, November 2015
23. Dissemination and implementation research: It works! What’s next? American Association for Cancer
Research Cancer Prevention Summit: Shaping the future of cancer prevention, VA, January 2016
24. Using the EMR to facilitate the cancer screening process, Texas FreshAir: Big Data and Data analytics,
San Antonio, TX, March 2016
25. Using implementation science to reduce disparities in cancer screening, American Association for
Cancer Research, Washington DC, April 2017
f. Podium presentations at scientific meetings:
1. Strecher VJ, Skinner CS, Hospers H & Banks S. Presenting health behavior change messages to
physicians and their patients: Project descriptions and preliminary results. American Public Health
Association, Oct. 1989.
2. Berend MJ, Sullivan DC, Skinner CS, Iglehart JD & Skinner MA. The natural history of mammo-
graphic calcifications subjected to interval follow-up. Society of Surgical Oncology, June 1992.
3. Skinner CS, Hospers H & Strecher VJ. Physician recommendations for mammography: Does tailoring
make a difference? American Public Health Association, Nov. 1992.
4. Kreuter MW, Strecher VJ, Kegler MC, Harris RP, Farrell DA & Skinner CS. Facilitating preventive
health care activities in a primary care setting. American Public Health Association, Nov. 1992.
5. Strecher VJ, Kreuter MW, Kegler MC, Roodhouse K, Farrell DA, Harris RP & Skinner CS. Assessing
alcohol problems in a primary care setting. American Public Health Association, Nov. 1992.
6. Kegler MC, Strecher VJ, Kreuter MW, Farrell DA, Harris RP & Skinner CS. Assessing exercise
behavior of patients in primary care settings. American Public Health Association, Nov. 1992.
7. Skinner CS & Champion VL. Do barriers to mammography vary by stage American Public Health
Association, Nov. 1994.
8. Skinner CS, Kreuter MW & Strecher VJ. Do women understand their breast cancer risk American Public
Health Association, Nov. 1994.
9. Miller AG, Champion VL & Skinner CS. Factors influencing effect of mammography screening in a
university workplace. American Public Health Association, Nov. 1994.
10. Skinner CS, Sykes RK & Arfken CL. Theory-informed breast cancer education for older, low-income
women: We can make it understandable. American Public Health Association, Nov. 1995.
11. Skinner CS, Sykes RK, Hill C & Arfken CL. The LEARN, SHARE & LIVE program: Breast cancer
education for older, low-income women. CITATION AWARD RECIPIENT. American Association for
Cancer Education, Oct. 1996.
12. Skinner CS, Arfken CL, & Sykes RK. Results from the LEARN, SHARE & LIVE program: Breast cancer
education for African American, urban women. Society of Behavioral Medicine, Apr. 1996.
13. Champion VL, Skinner CS & Springstein J. Predictors of mammography stage in non-compliant women.
American Public Health Association, Nov. 1997.
14. Skinner CS, Ryan EL, Whelan AJ & Gidday LL. Genetic risk assessment counseling for first-degree
relatives of breast cancer patients: Why are women opting against participation American Public Health
Association, Nov. 1998.
CS Skinner, CV 09/21/16
15. Babb S, Swisher E, Whelan AJ, Skinner CS, Mutch D & Rader J. Prophylactic oophorectomy: Patient
characteristics and post-decision adjustment. National Society of Genetic Counselors, Nov. 1998.
16. Skinner CS, Champion VL, Menon U. Race and education differences in mammography-related
perceptions. Society of Behavioral Medicine, March, 1999.
17. Champion VL, Skinner CS, Menon U. Comparison of tailored interventions for mammography. Society
of Behavioral Medicine, March, 1999.
18. Champion VL, Skinner CS, Menon U, Rawl & Anzalone D. Preliminary effects comparing tailored
mammography interventions. State of the Science Congress, National Institute for Nursing Research.
Washington DC, Sept, 1999.
19. Skinner CS, Ryan GL, Menon U & Champion VL. Variables important for tailoring interventions to
African Americans: Process findings from a mammography intervention study. American Public Health
Association, Nov, 1999.
20. Menon U, Champion VL, Maraj M & Skinner CS. Tailored intervention outcomes among African
Americans: Effects of different tailoring media in a mammography intervention study. American Public
Health Association, Nov. 1999.
21. Iglehart JD, Skinner CS, Calingeart B, Miron A, Rimer BK, Clark SR & Schildkraut JS. Testing for
hereditary breast and ovarian cancer in the southern United States. The Southern Surgical Association, Dec.
1999.
22. Rawl SM, Champion VL, Menon U, Loehrer P & Skinner CS. First-degree relatives of colorectal cancer
patients: Knowledge, beliefs and cancer screening behavior. Society of Behavioral Medicine, April, 2000.
23. Clark S, Skinner CS, Calingaert B, Pollack KI, Marcom PK, Sarratt WE, Sugarman J & Winer E.
Unaffected women considering genetic counseling for BRCA1 & 2. National Society of Genetic
Counselors, Nov, 2000.
24. Reuille K, Menon U, Champion VL & Skinner CS. Effect of age and race on beliefs regarding
mammography screening among non-adherent women aged 51 and older. Oncology Nursing Society, Feb,
2001.
25. Todora HS, Menon U, Champion VL, Davis JB & Skinner CS. Attrition in a mammography
intervention study: Who completes and who does not? Society of Behavioral Medicine, March, 2001.
26. Rawl SM, Champion VL, Menon U, May FL, Vance G, Hunter C, Loehrer P & Skinner CS.
Differences in health beliefs by stage of readiness to screen for colorectal cancer among 1st- degree
relatives of affected individuals. Society of Behavioral Medicine, March, 2001.
27. Skinner CS. Capitalizing on circumstances: Evaluations of the use of teachable moments in
health behavior interventions. Discussant. Society of Behavioral Medicine, March, 2001.
28. Skinner CS, Schidlkraut JM, Berry D, Calingaert B, Marcom PK, Sugarman J, Winer EP, Futreal
PA & Rimer, BK. Pre-Counseling education materials for BRCA testing: Does tailoring make
difference? American Psychological Association Conference on Women’s Health, Feb, 2002.
29. Russell K, Champion VL, Skinner CS. Irregular mammography screening use in African
American women. American Public Health Association, Nov, 2002.
30. Kreuter MW, Skinner CS, Steger-May K, Holt CL, Bucholtz DC, Clark EM & Haire-Joshu.
Reactions to behaviorally vs. culturally tailored cancer communication among African American
women. American Public Health Association, Nov, 2003.
31. Skinner CS. Tailored interventions for health behavior change: Historical developments and
lessons learned. Keynote Address, Computer-Tailored Interventions Pre-conference Seminar.
Midwest Nursing Research Society, Feb, 2003.
CS Skinner, CV 09/21/16
32. Skinner CS, Schildkraut J, Steadman S, Susswein L, Corio C & Reid L. African American's
attitudes about the CGN (Cancer Genetics Network). Society of Behavioral Medicine, March, 2004
33. Rawl SM, Champion VL, Scott L, Monahan P, Cotton T, Weaver L., Overgaard A, Buchanan AH,
Skinner CS. Testing Usability of a Tailored Interactive Health Communication Intervention to Increase
Colon Cancer Screening Among African Americans. Oncology Nursing Society, Feb., 2005.
34. Skinner CS, Champion VL, Monahan P, Fyfe J, Kobrin SC & Todora HS. Tailored interventions for
screening mammography: When is a booster dose important? American Public Health Association, 2004.
35. Skinner CS, Schildkraut J, Calingaert B, Hoyo C, Crankshaw SS, Fish L, Susswein L, Corio C & Reid L.
Factors associated with African Americans' enrollment in a cancer genetics registry. American Society of
Human Genetics, Oct., 2005.
36. Menon U, Witter BE, Champion VL & Skinner CS. Colon cancer screening beliefs by stage of behavior
adoption. Society of Behavioral Medicine, April, 2005.
37. Buchanan AH, Skinner CS, King RB & Marcom PK. Establishment of an outreach cancer genetic
counseling program in rural North Carolina cancer clinics: Feasibility, patient characteristics, and
satisfaction. National Society of Genetic Counselors, November, 2005.
38. Gierisch JM, O’Neill S, Rimer BK & Skinner CS. Who’s getting annual interval mammograms?
AcademyHealth Annual Research Meeting, June 2007.
39. Rasco DW, Xie Y, Jan Y, Sayne JR, Skinner CS, Dowell JE & Gerber DE. The Impact of Consenter
Characteristics and Experience on Patient Interest in Clinical Research. (Award recipient) Eastern
Cooperative Oncology Group, 2008.
40. Shelby RA, Keefe FJ, Bovbjerg DH, Skinner CS, Somers TJ, Soo MS, Red R, Stinnett S, Luce MF &
Sumkin J. Perceived Risk of Breast Cancer, Beliefs about Mammography, and Psychological Distress in
Breast Cancer Survivors and Healthy Women at the Time of Mammography. Society of Behavioral
Medicine, April 2010.
41. Rawl SM, Skinner CS, Champion V, Springston J, Perkin S, Tong Y, Gebregziabher N, Krier C, Rhyant
B, Russell K, Imperiale T, Willis D, & Myers LJ. Use of a Tailored Interactive Computer Intervention in
Primary Care Changes Health Beliefs about Colorectal Cancer Screening. Midwest Nursing Research
Society, 2010.
42. Shelby RA, Keefe FK, Bovbjerg DH, Soo MS, Red S, Skinner CS, Stinnett S, Luce MF & Sumkin JH.
Perceived Risk of Breast Cancer, Beliefs about Mammography, and Psychological Distress in Breast
Cancer Survivors and Healthy Women at the Time of Mammography. International Congress of
Behavioral Medicine, 2010.
43. Singal AG, Yopp AC, Tiro JA, Skinner CS, Pack M, Nehra M, Lee WM & Marrero J. Process of care
failure rates for hepatocellular carcinoma surveillance. American Association for the Study of Liver
Diseases, 2011.
44. Tiro JA, Persaud D, Sanders JM, Stevens CF, Bishop WP, Fuller S, Skinner CS. Effect of mailed brochure
and telephone recall/reminder on adolescent HPV vaccine initiation: results from a randomized trial.
Presented at the 28th annual International Papillomavirus Conference, Puerto Rico, November, 2012
45. Lee SJC, Marks EG, Sanders JM, Skinner CS, Wiebe DJ. Developing an Inter-personal Framework for
Lung Cancer Decision Making: African American Patient-Caregiver Experiences in Safety-net Care. MD
Anderson Survivorship Research Symposium, Houston TX Jan 2014. Citation for Faculty Excellence in
Research.
46. Lee SJC, Marks EG, Skinner CS, Wiebe DJ. Exploring African-American patient-caregiver experiences
in safety-net care for lung cancer. American Anthropological Association, Chicago IL Nov 2014
CS Skinner, CV 09/21/16
47. Balasubramanian B, Tiro JA, Lee SC, Gupta S & Skinner CS. Cancer and non-cancer follow-up care among vulnerable colorectal cancer survivors with multimorbidities. American Society for Preventive Oncology, 2014.
48. Bishop WP, Tiro JA, Melhado TV, Stevens C, Lee SC, Skinner CS. Evaluating the validity of health literacy items in English and Spanish-speaking Hispanics from a community registry. Presented at the 140th annual American Public Health Association, October 2012.
49. Tiro JA, Persaud D, Sanders JM, Stevens CF, Fuller S, Bishop WP, Skinner CS. Effects of an
intervention promoting HPV vaccination in an urban safety-net healthcare system. Presented at the
141st of the American Public Health Association, Boston, MA.
h. Scientific exhibits:
1. Skinner CS, Zerr AD & Damson RL. Mobile mammography units: Focus group interviews among
inner-city health center patients. CITATION AWARD RECIPIENT, Society of Behavioral Medicine,
March, 1993.
2. Skinner CS, den Boer DJ & Strecher VJ. Another look at barriers to mammography screening. Society
of Behavioral Medicine, April, 1994.
3. Ryan EL & Skinner CS. Risk beliefs and interest in counseling: Focus groups among 1st-degree
relatives of breast cancer patients. Society of Behavioral Medicine, March, 1996.
4. Ryan EL & Skinner CS. Perceived risk and beliefs about risk modification among 1st-degree relatives
of breast cancer patients. American Public Health Association, Nov, 1996.
5. Skinner CS, Arfken CL & Sykes RK. Mammography screening among older, minority, low-income
urban women. Society of Behavioral Medicine, April 1997.
6. Skinner CS, Arfken CL & Monsees BS. Do older, African American women derive psychological
benefits from mammography? Society of Behavioral Medicine, March, 1998.
7. Ryan EL, Skinner CS & Gidday L. Response to risk assessment counseling invitations by 1st-degree
relatives with lower perceived risk & anxiety. Society of Behavioral Medicine, March, 1998.
8. Skinner CS, Shoemaker J, Marcom KP, Regan K, Schildkraut JM, Iglehart JD & Rimer BK.
Facilitating informed decision making for BRCA1 and BRCA2 genetic testing. 7th Annual SPORE
Investigators’ Workshop. National Cancer Institute, July, 1999.
9. Ryan GL, Skinner CS, Menon U & Champion VL. Examining the boundaries of tailoring health
promotion messages: Individually tailored vs. group-targeted mammography promotion messages.
American Public Health Association, Nov, 1999.
10. Champion VL, Skinner CS, Menon U & Anzelone D. Preliminary effect comparing tailored
mammography interventions. American Public Health Association, Nov, 1999.
11. Hohberger J, Tibbs T, Heilman D, Menon U, Skith K, Champion VL & Skinner CS. Differences in
cancer fatalism by race and religious affiliation. CITATION AWARD RECIPIENT, Society of Behavioral
Medicine, April, 2000.
12. Champion VL, Menon U, Maraj M, Hui S, Perkins AJ & Skinner CS. Comparison of tailored
interventions to increase mammography screening in non-adherent women 50 and over. Society of
Behavioral Medicine, April, 2000.
13. Bosworth HB, Bastian LU, Kuchitbhatta MN, Steffens DC, McBride CM, Skinner CS, Rimer BK &
Siegler IC. The relationship between depressive symptoms and climacteric symptoms in women at mid-
life. Society of Psychosomatic Medicine, March, 2000.
CS Skinner, CV 09/21/16
14. Buchanan A, Clark S, Skinner CS, Sarratt WE, McLamb C & DeVellis BM. Cancer Genetics Network
education tools: Development of an internet-based resource for health professionals. National Society of
Genetic Counselors, Nov, 2000.
15. Marcom PK, Clark S, Skinner CS, Calingaert B, Pollak KI, Sarratt WE, Sugarman J & Winer E.
Predictors of genetic counseling for BRCA1 & 2 among unaffected women. San Antonio Breast
Cancer Symposium, Oct, 2000.
16. Kelly K, Skinner CS, Rawl S, Champion VL, Whelan AJ, Ivanovich J, Vance G, Hunter C & Todora H.
Hassle as a predictor of intent to receive genetic counseling for colo-rectal cancer in first-degree
relatives. Society of Behavioral Medicine, March, 2001.
17. Skinner CS, Schildkraut J, Berry D, Calingeart B, Marcom PK, Sugarman J, Winer EP, Iglehart JD,
Futreal PA & Rimer BK. Tailored versus non-tailored materials to facilitate BRCA testing decisions.
CITATION AWARD RECIPIENT. Society of Behavioral Medicine, March, 2001.
18. Bayer L, Smith KL, Holtz M, Todora HS & Skinner CS. Cancer worry and intrusive thoughts among
first-degree relatives: The role of monitoring, perceived risk and social support. Society of Behavioral
Medicine, March, 2001.
19. Skinner CS, Schildkraut J, Steadman S, Susswein L, Corio C & Reid L. African American's attitudes
about participating in family cancer registries. NCI Minority-Serving Institution/ Comprehensive
Cancer Centers Funded Investigators Workshop, Nov, 2003.
20. Kobrin SC, Skinner CS, Devellis R, Devellis B, Earp J, Harris R & Rimer BK. Measuring breast cancer
risk perceptions: A new scale. American Society of Preventive Oncology, March, 2004.
21. Skinner CS, Buchanan AH, Champion VL, Monahan P, Bourff S. Rawl SM, Springston J. Exposure
and reactions to tailored mammography interventions via telephone v. DVD. American Society of
Preventive Oncology, 2009.
22. Rawl SM., Champion VL, Skinner CS, Springston J, Russell KM, Perkins, S., Rhyant B, Lloyd, F,
Willis D, Doebbeling B., Imperiale T. Developing and Pre-testing a Tailored Interactive Computer
Program to Promote Colon Cancer Screening. 11th Annual National Dialogue for Action Conference, 2009.
23. Julka M, Tiro J & Skinner CS. Investigating Mother's Exposure And Reaction to Media Messages
About Hpv Vaccine, North American Primary Care Research Group, 2009.
24. Skinner CS, Tiro JT, Bishop WP, Bruce C & Goodall. Factors associated with community members’
participation in a research registry. American Association for Cancer Research, 2009.
25. Tiro, JA, Bruce C, Bishop WP, Goodell K, Skinner CS. Factors associated with adolescent HPV vaccine
uptake in safety-net clinics. Association for Cancer Research Frontiers in Cancer Prevention, December, 2009.
26. Gerber DE, Rasco DW, Skinner CS, Dowell J, Yan J, Sayne JR, Xie Y. Consenting factors in clinical
cancer research: Observations from a cancer center tissue repository. American Society for Clinical
Oncology, 2010.
27. Gupta S, Tong L, Anderson P, Rose B, Carter D, Koch M, Argenbright K, Rockey D & Skinner CS.
Validation of an administrative database for determination of colorectal cancer screening test use and
quality in a safety-net health system. Digestive Disease Week, 2010.
28. Shelby RA, Keefe FK, Bovbjerg DH, Soo MS, Red S, Skinner CS, Stinnett S, Luce MF & Sumkin JH.
Negative Mood and Anxiety in Breast Cancer Survivors and Healthy Women during Routine
Mammography Screening. Society of Behavioral Medicine, 2010.
CS Skinner, CV 09/21/16
29. Frierson GM, Willis B, DeFina L, Perales M, Simmons S & Skinner CS. Facilitating Factors and
Barriers of Multi-Ethnic Participants? Decisions to Participate in Genetic Biobanking: Project Diversity
GATHER. International Congress of Behavioral Medicine, 2010.
30. Rawl SM, Champion VL, Monohan P, Springston J & Skinner CS. Predicting stage of readiness to
screen for colorectal cancer among African Americans. International Congress of Behavioral Medicine, 2010.
31. Frierson GM, Willis B, DeFina L, Perales M, Simmons S & Skinner CS. Psychosocial factors
influencing a multi-ethnic sample’s willingness to participate in genetic testing: Project GATHER.
International Congress of Behavioral Medicine, 2010.
32. Perales MC, Frierson GM, Simmons M, Skinner CS, Willis B, & DeFina L. Project GATHER: Can
health care perceptions facilitate decisions of a multi-ethnic sample to participate in a genetic biobank.
International Congress of Behavioral Medicine, 2010.
33. Smith-Howell ER, Rawl SM, Champion VL, Skinner CS, Springston J, Krier C, Russell KM, Perkins S,
Rhyant B, Lloyd F, Willis D, Imperiale T, & Myers LJ. Exploring the Role of Cancer Fatalism as a
Barrier to Colorectal Screening. Midwest Nursing Research Society, 2010.
34. Rawl SM, Skinner CS, Champion VL, ; Springston J, Perkins S, Tong Y, Gebregziabher N, Krier C,
Rhyant B, Russell K, Imperiale T, Willis D, Myers LM. Predicting Stage of Readiness to Screen for
Colorectal Cancer among African Americans. International Congress of Behavioral Medicine, 2010.
35. Bishop WP, Tiro JA & Skinner CS. Combining methods for translating materials into Spanish: Results
from the HPV and media study. American Society for Preventive Oncology, March, 2010.
36. Skinner CS, et al. The Cancer Risk Intake System: Preliminary outcomes. Society of Behavioral
Medicine, 2011.
37. Krier CJ, Skinner CS, Champion VL, Springston J, Perkins SM, Tong Y, Gebregziabher N, Imperiale
TF, Brady-Watts T, Myers LJ, Rawl SM. A Computer-Tailored Intervention Increases Patient-Provider
Discussion and Appointment Making for Colorectal Cancer Screening. American Association for
Cancer Research, 2011.
38. Singal AG, Yopp AC, Tiro JA, Skinner CS, Packer M, Lee WM, Marrero JA. Process of Care Failure
Rates for Hepatocellular Carcinoma Surveillance. International Liver Cancer Association, 2011.
39. Singal AG, Yopp AC, Tiro JA, Skinner CS, Packer M, Nehra M, Lee WM, Marrero JA. Process of Care
Failure Rates for Hepatocellular Carcinoma Surveillance. American Association for Study of Liver
Diseases, 2011.
40. Bishop WP, Skinner CS, and Tiro JT. Physician Trust and Communication influences willingness to
follow physician HPV vaccine recommendations and actual vaccine uptake. American Society of
Preventive Oncology, 2011.
41. Tiro JA, Bishop WP, Melhado TV, Lee SC and Skinner CS. Race/ethnicity/language moderates the
influence of physician trust and communication on willingness to follow physician recommendation and
HPV vaccination. Society of Behavioral Medicine, 2011.
42. Gupta S, Hammons M, Valdez L, Carter E, Koch M, Tong L, Ahn C, Kashner M, Tiro J, Halm E,
Skinner CS. A randomized comparative effectiveness trial of system-level mailed invitation to FIT,
system-level mailed invitation to Colonoscopy, and usual care for colorectal cancer screening among the
uninsured: Interim findings. Cancer Prevention & Research Institute of Texas: Innovations in Cancer
Prevention and Research Conference, 2011.
43. Christy, SM, Perkins, SM., Tong, Y, Gebregziabher, N, Krier, C, Champion, VL., Skinner, CS.,
Springston, J., Rhyant, B., Imperiale, TF., & Rawl, S.M, Predictors of Colorectal Cancer Screening
CS Skinner, CV 09/21/16
Discussions between African-American Patients and their Providers. Society of Behavioral Medicine, 2012.
44. Bishop WP, Tiro JA, McCallister KL, Sanders JM, Melhado T, Lee SC & Skinner CS. Effectiveness of
a community research registry to recruit minorities and underserved adults for research studies.
American Public Health Association, 2012.
45. Crier CJ, Skinner CS, Champion AL, Springston J, Perkinds S, Tong Y, Gebregziabher N, Imperale TF,
Brady-Watts T, Myers LJ, & Rawl S. Computer-tailored intervention increases patient-provider
discussion and appointment making for colorectal cancer screening. American Association for Cancer
Research, 2012.
46. PROSPR Study Investigators. Population-based research optimizing screening through personalized
regimens (PROSPR): A National Cancer Institute initiative, 2012.
47. Rawl SM, Perkins S, Tong Y, Krier C, Christy S, Wang HL, Champion VL, Springston J & Skinner
CS. Increasing colorectal cancer screening in low-income black primary-care patients: 6 month results
of a randomized trial. Cancer Nursing Society, 2012.
48. Buchanan AH, Schildkraut JM, Voils CI, Fine C, Horick N, Murray S, Marcom PK & Skinner CS.
Adherence to cancer risk management recommendations among unaffected BRCA mutation carriers.
National Society of Genetic Counselors, 2013.
49. Tiro JA, Persaud D, Sanders JM, Stevens CF, Fuller S, Bishop WP, Skinner CS. Effect of mailed brochure
and telephone recall/reminder on adolescent HPV vaccination. Society for Behavioral Medicine, 2013.
50. Buchanan AH, Fine C, Skinner CS, Schildkraut JM, Horick N, Marcom PK, Voils CI. Perceived benefits
of and barriers to risk management among unaffected BRCA mutation carriers. International Symposium on
Hereditary Breast and Ovarian Cancer, 2014.
51. Edmond SA, Shelby RA, Keefe FJ, Soo MS, Skinner CS, Stinnett S, Ahrendt GM, Manculich J, Sumkin
JH, Zuley ML, Bovbjerg DH. Persistent pain following breast cancer surgery: A case-control study.
American Association of Clinical Oncology, 2014.
52. Pruitt SL, Halm EA, Tiro JA, Lee SC, Bishop WP, Balasubramanian B, Skinner CS. Neighborhood
Poverty and Colorectal Cancer Screening: Do Neighborhood Definitions Make a Difference? Poster
presented at the 38th annual meeting of the American Society of Prevention Oncology (ASPO), 2014.
53. Tiro JA, Lee SC, Farrell D, Marks EG, Skinner CS, Baldwin AS Development of a Self-persuasion Tablet-
based Application for Parents Undecided about HPV Vaccination. To be presented as a poster at the
American Society of Preventive Oncology meeting, March 15, 2015, Birmingham, AL.
54. Skinner CS, Gupta S, Halm EA, Wright S, McCallister K, Bishop WP, Santini N, Mayorga C, Agrawal D,
Moran B, Sanders JM, Singal AG. Development of the Parkland-UT Southwestern Colonoscopy Reporting
System (CoRS) for evidence-based colon cancer surveillance recommendations, Society for Behavioral
Medicine, 2015.
55. Kahn B, Freeland Z, Gopal P, Agrawal D, Mayorga C, Mithani R, Skinner CS, Halm E, Singal AG.
Predictors of guideline concordance for surveillance colonoscopy recommendations among patients in a
safety-net health system. Society for Behavioral Medicine, 2015.
56. McCarthy AM, Zheng Y, Kim JJ, Burnett-Hartman A, Skinner CS, McLerran K, Quinn VP, Haas J, Corley
DA, Armstrong K & Doubeni CA. Timely follow up of abnormal breast and colorectal cancer screening
tests in women by race/ethnicity. International Cancer Screening Network, 2015.
57. Singal AG, Gupta S, McCallister K, Sanders JM, Tiro JA, Bishop WP, Loewen AC, Skinner CS, Halm
EA. Comparative Effectiveness Randomized Controlled Trial of Colorectal Cancer Screening Strategies
among an Underserved Patient Population. International Cancer Screening Network, 2015.
CS Skinner, CV 09/21/16
58. Rhodes R, Elwood B, Lee SJC, Tiro J, Halm EA & Skinner CS. Development of an educational
intervention about end-of-life care options for seriously ill African American patients and their caregivers.
American Academy of Hospice and Palliative Medicine, 2016
59. Beaber E, Tosteson A, Hass J, Onega T, Sprague B, Weaver D, McCarthy AM, Duobeni C, Quinn V,
Skinner CS, Zauber A & Barlow W. Breast cancer screening initiation and recall patterns among first-time
screeners within the PROSPOR consortium. Epidemiology Congress of the Americas, 2016