Health management and policy student lets the data tell the story

Wednesday, April 19, 2017
易胜博官网 student Emily Carbonara '17

For Emily Carbonara '17, an internship turned into an opportunity to conduct meaningful research.

When senior Emily Carbonara started a summer internship at Exeter Hospital in Exeter, 易胜博官网, she didn鈥檛 know it would launch her into research on youth suicide prevention in the state.

What began as a community health needs assessment turned into a yearlong project that brings youth suicide in 易胜博官网 into the spotlight. Carbonara has been researching what factors increase vulnerability to suicidal intentions among the state鈥檚 youth as a means to create more appropriately targeted intervention programs.

鈥淚 got immersed in this data that tells a very compelling story,鈥 says Carbonara.

鈥淚 looked at what can be a protective factor against suicide and found that the most significant factor is feeling that you matter to your community and to other people.

For instance, 37 percent of survey respondents who have been physically abused by a significant other have听reported that they've听seriously considered suicide. Wanting to know more, Carbonara dug deeper into the data and discovered that more females than males reported having suicidal thoughts or intentions. Then she overlapped data on substance abuse and found that opioid use was the most significant factor affecting one鈥檚 vulnerability to suicidal thoughts.

What else did the data reveal?

鈥淚 looked at what can be a protective factor against suicide and found that the most significant factor is feeling that you matter to your community and to other people,鈥 Carbonara says. 鈥淭his project ultimately went in a public health direction听rather than a clinical one. It asks the question 鈥楬ow can the community become a support system for youth?鈥欌

Carbonara鈥檚 research, which she conducted alongside health management and policy associate professor Semra Aytur, will eventually be published. In the meantime, she鈥檒l graduate in May and start a job at BerryDunn Consultants in Portland, Maine, in a position usually reserved for a master鈥檚-prepared graduate. There, she鈥檒l have the opportunity to work on needs assessment projects for health systems throughout New England and beyond.

鈥淚 feel very fortunate,鈥 she says. 鈥溡资げ┕偻 has done so much to help me prepare for my career beyond college.鈥

Hear more health-related research findings during the College of Health and Human Services , Friday, April 21, 1:30 鈥 4 p.m. in Pettee Hall rooms G10 and 106.