Ijeoma Opara, PhD, LMSW, MPH
Associate Professor of Public Health (Social and Behavioral Sciences)Cards
About
Research
Publications
2026
Qualitative Exploration of Neighborhoods, Youth Substance Misuse, and Mental Health in an Urban Community
Opara I, Weerakoon S, Saeed G, Duran-Becerra B, Pagan C. Qualitative Exploration of Neighborhoods, Youth Substance Misuse, and Mental Health in an Urban Community. Journal Of Clinical Child & Adolescent Psychology 2026, ahead-of-print: 1-16. PMID: 41719485, DOI: 10.1080/15374416.2026.2617211.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchFocus groupsMental healthSchool-based mental health programsCulturally responsive mental health servicesResponsive mental health servicesRetailers near schoolsUrban youthQualitative explorationMental health programsYouth substance misuseMental health interventionsMental health servicesSubstance misuseVenue-based samplingCommunity-level riskSubstance useHealthy developmental trajectoriesTrauma frameworkMultilevel interventionsNeighborhood safetyHealth interventionsHealth programsHealth servicesYouth of colorEconomic environmentHBCUs as sites for sexual health promotion among Black emerging adults
Rutledge J, Lindsay J, Abrams J, Benson L, Opara I. HBCUs as sites for sexual health promotion among Black emerging adults. Journal Of American College Health 2026, ahead-of-print: 1-4. PMID: 41700967, DOI: 10.1080/07448481.2026.2626333.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchSexual health promotionHealth promotionHIV preventionPublic health effortsHIV Epidemic goalsPeer-to-peer programSexual health disparitiesCommunity-based effortsSexual health educationSexually transmitted infectionsHealth disparitiesHIV diagnosisHealth effortsHealth educationSexual healthHIVAdultsFunding cutsPreventionReproductive rightsBlack peopleBlackCampus eventsHealthGreek letter organizations“Hear our voices”: A qualitative exploration of mental health among Black girls
Opara I, Brooks-Stephens J, Asabor E, Banya M, Metzger I. “Hear our voices”: A qualitative exploration of mental health among Black girls. Children And Youth Services Review 2026, 181: 108721. DOI: 10.1016/j.childyouth.2025.108721.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMental health stigmaMental health experiencesHealth stigmaMental healthExperiences of Black girlsSemi-structured focus groupsQualitative explorationMental health programsMental health servicesMental health outcomesMental Well-BeingFocus group methodologyBlack girlsCulturally relevant preventionHealth outcomesHealth programsHealth servicesFocus groupsPerceptions of Black girlsStudy participantsIntersection of raceGroup methodologyStigmaWell-beingGendered RacismNeighborhood Violence Impacts on HIV and STI Testing Among Sexual Minority Youth in the United States.
Takenaka B, Weerakoon S, Sobrino M, Bustamante M, Nwaozuru U, Herrera C, Sesenu F, Ansarizadeh K, Flores J, Johnson R, Opara I. Neighborhood Violence Impacts on HIV and STI Testing Among Sexual Minority Youth in the United States. AIDS Education And Prevention 2026, 38: 29-46. PMID: 41746610, DOI: 10.1521/aeap.2026.38.1.29.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsSexual minority youthExposure to neighborhood violenceNeighborhood violenceSexually transmitted infection testingSexually transmitted infectionsMinority youthOdds of testingSample of sexual minority youthYouth Risk Behavior Surveillance SystemSocial structural factorsMultilevel logistic regressionUnited StatesViolence impactViolence predictorsBehavior Surveillance SystemViolenceNon-whiteU.S. DataWeighted bivariateNeighborhoodYouthLogistic regressionSurveillance systemSchool propertySexualitySpatial and racial/ethnic disparities in cardiovascular mortality attributable to PM2.5 components in the contiguous United States
Hu Y, Chu L, Renzetti S, Zang E, Opara I, Lu Y, Spatz E, Krumholz H, Chen K. Spatial and racial/ethnic disparities in cardiovascular mortality attributable to PM2.5 components in the contiguous United States. Science Advances 2026, 12: eadx2075. PMID: 41604483, PMCID: PMC12851041, DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.adx2075.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsLong-term exposure to fine particulate matterExposure to fine particulate matterContiguous United StatesFine particulate matterPM2.5 componentsParticulate matterBlack carbonCVD deathRacial/ethnic disparitiesNon-Hispanic blacksNon-Hispanic whitesCardiovascular diseaseRacial/ethnic groupsGeographic regionsTargeted interventionsUnited StatesEast North CentralRisk factorsDisparitiesRegression modelsNorth CentralMatterAtlanticCaliforniaCarbonInspiring hope, confronting hopelessness: healthcare experiences of Black/African American pregnant and post-partum women and healthcare workers in Detroit, Michigan, U.S.A.
Kaljee L, Dankerlui D, Pach A, Davidson B, Opara I, Reyes L, MacLean L. Inspiring hope, confronting hopelessness: healthcare experiences of Black/African American pregnant and post-partum women and healthcare workers in Detroit, Michigan, U.S.A. BMC Pregnancy And Childbirth 2026, 26: 179. PMID: 41593541, PMCID: PMC12918345, DOI: 10.1186/s12884-026-08666-5.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchHerth Hope IndexHealthcare recipientsSources of careBlack/African American womenHealthcare workersFocus groupsWork-related sourcesHealthcare experiencesDemographic formHighest maternal mortality ratesExperiences of healthcare workersAmerican womenSemi-structured interview guideMaternal mortality ratePost-partum careWomen's health clinicQualitative outcomesGlobal health initiativesWorkshop participantsBackgroundThe United StatesMixed-methods studyHigh-income countriesPost-partum womenLevel of hopefulnessMortality rateHair‐esteem toolkit for Black girls: The development of a self‐esteem toolkit for Black adolescent girls centering hair as a tool for empowerment
Hussett‐Richardson S, Sissoko G, Opara I. Hair‐esteem toolkit for Black girls: The development of a self‐esteem toolkit for Black adolescent girls centering hair as a tool for empowerment. Journal Of Research On Adolescence 2026, 36: e70135. PMID: 41514456, DOI: 10.1111/jora.70135.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsYouth advisory boardBlack girlsBlack adolescent girlsAspects of genderAdolescent girlsGendered RacismSelf-esteemEthnic identityEmpowerment strategiesParticipatory research approachHealth behaviorsIntervention developmentBeauty standardsYouthHair discriminationAdvisory BoardPotential first stepResearch approach
2025
The role of sleep in the relationship between racial discrimination and suicide ideation among black girls: A path analysis
Opara I, Sissoko G, Wan X, Weerakoon S. The role of sleep in the relationship between racial discrimination and suicide ideation among black girls: A path analysis. Journal Of Affective Disorders 2025, 398: 120896. PMID: 41422961, DOI: 10.1016/j.jad.2025.120896.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchSuicidal ideationIndirect effect of racial discriminationInsufficient sleepRacial discriminationAssociated with suicidal ideationLikelihood of suicidal ideationEffects of racial discriminationPath analysisSelf-reported racial discriminationFemale high school studentsMental health researchEffects of discriminationIndirect effectsCulturally responsive interventionsSleep's roleSuicide riskSuicidal thoughtsHigh school studentsModeration modelIdeationAdolescent girlsSystemic stressorsSuicideNo significant interactionSuicide ratesRacial Self-Efficacy and Ethnic Identity in the Context of Neighborhood Violence and Internalizing Symptoms Among Black and Latinx youth: An Application of the Minority Stress Theory.
Weerakoon S, Henson-Garcia M, Rose R, Lindsay J, Srikanth N, Opara I. Racial Self-Efficacy and Ethnic Identity in the Context of Neighborhood Violence and Internalizing Symptoms Among Black and Latinx youth: An Application of the Minority Stress Theory. Community Health Equity Research & Policy 2025, 2752535x251406670. PMID: 41337681, DOI: 10.1177/2752535x251406670.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchEthnic identity explorationInternalizing symptomsSelf-EfficacyMental health experiencesNeighborhood violenceIdentity explorationAssociated with internalizing symptomsLatinx youthSymptoms of anxietyMinority stress theoryExposure to neighborhood violenceMental health challengesStructural equation modelingLatinx adolescentsMethodsUsing cross-sectional dataEquation modelingConclusionsThese findingsCross-sectional dataMinoritized youthAdolescentsSymptomsEthnic identityYouthLatinxHealth challengesThe Application of Intersectionality Theory in Family‐Based Substance Use Prevention for Urban Black Adolescents
Opara I, Metzger I, Pham C, Boyd D. The Application of Intersectionality Theory in Family‐Based Substance Use Prevention for Urban Black Adolescents. Journal Of Family Theory & Review 2025, 17: 910-921. DOI: 10.1111/jftr.70022.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchIntersectionality theoryBlack adolescentsApplication of intersectionality theoryUrban communitiesUrban Black familiesSubstance use ratesConsequences of substance useSubstance use preventionIntersectional identitiesUrban black adolescentsBlack familiesFamily-centered approachFamily processesSystemic racismPrevention researchFamily scientistsFamily scienceSubstance useFamily-basedIdentityEnvironmental challengesFamilyCommunityIntersectionRacism
Academic Achievements & Community Involvement
News
News
- August 13, 2025Source: Yale University
Innovation that Matters: Yale School of Public Health
- January 23, 2025
Ijeoma Opara Receives Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers
- December 30, 2024Source: The Tribe
Sober in the city: Rethinking celebration in Chicago
- November 18, 2024
YSPH Professor Shares Research, Explores Potential Collaborations During Jamaica Visit