Title(s): Assistant Professor
Department: Epidemiology
Office: S431 CPHB
Phone: 319-335-0101
I am a maternal and child health epidemiologist, grounded in social epidemiology with a commitment to improving the health and life outcomes for underserved and at-risk families. My research is focused on understanding the intergenerational effects of maternal adverse childhood events, perinatal mental health and maternal substance use. My long-term goal is to develop and discover interventions to mitigate the adverse intergenerational effects of these conditions and experiences. In 2019, I started the EMPOWER (empowering mothers, providers and others to weigh in as experts in research). The EMPOWER project is a collaborative that includes patients who have had a lived experience of substance use during pregnancy, clinicians, researchers, and community stakeholders. Our mission is to improve care, health outcomes and wellbeing for pregnant women with or a history of substance use and their children through collaborating with patient, community, clinical, and academic stakeholders and co-designing and co-leading research initiatives.
Research Interests
- Maternal Child Health
- Substance use during the timing of pregnancy and postpartum
- Patient and community engaged research
Background
In the News
- CPH faculty lead innovative projects backed by Obermann Center grants
- Plugged in to Public Health: Changing stigma to support with the Empower Project
- UI College of Public Health receives funding to expand maternal and child health curriculum
- Nichole Nidey works to change stigma to support
- Nidey discusses substance use and maternal health
- Nidey discusses postpartum depression in rural populations
- Nidey discusses stressors during, after pregnancy