Natasha Malmin
Assistant Professor Population Health Sciences- Education
BA- Chemistry, Denison University;
MPH- Global Environmental Health, Emory University;
PhD -Public Policy, Georgia State University & Georgia Institute of Technology.
- Biography
Dr. Malmin has a joint Ph.D. in public policy from Georgia Institute of Technology and Georgia State University, a Master of Public Health from Emory University and a Bachelor’s degree in chemistry from Denison University. Before teaching, she was a health scientist with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention for seven years, working on disaster preparedness, response, and climate change research. She was also a researcher within the National Science Foundation-funded Disasters and Statistical Models of Academic Recovery Trajectories in Schools (Disaster SMART Schools) Project and a fellow within the William Averette Anderson Fund (BAF).
- Publications
Malmin N. Eisenman, D. Disability Prevalence and Community-Level Allocation of Hurricane Harvey Federal Disaster Recovery Assistance in Texas. Journal of Disability Policy Studies, 2023. 10442073221150609.
Malmin N. Navigating Federal Disaster Assistance Eligibility and Special Accommodations: The Case of Hurricane Harvey. Natural Hazards Review. 2023. 24(2), 04022049.
Malmin N, Esnard A-M, Wyczalkowski C, Lai B. Schools and disasters: examining the evidence for K-12 settings across the emergency management phases. Journal of Emergency Management, 19(4), 327–337. https://doi.org/10.5055/jem.0501 (https://doi.org/10.5055/jem.0501)
Malmin N. Historical disaster exposure and household preparedness across the US. Disaster Med Public Health Prep. 2020 Jan 13;1-7. doi: 10.1017/dmp.2019.123
* Esnard A-M, Lai BS, Wyczalkowski C, Malmin N, Shah HJ. School vulnerability to disaster: examination of school closure, demographic, and exposure factors in Hurricane Ike’s wind swath. Natural Hazards. 2017. doi: 10.1007/s11069-017-3057-2
* Stehling-Ariza T, Fisher E, Vagi S, Fechter-Leggett E, Prudent N, Dott M, Daley R, Avchen RN. Monitoring of persons with risk for exposure to Ebola Virus Disease - United States, November 3, 2014-March 8, 2015. (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26135588) Morb Mortal Wkly Rep. 2015 Jul 3;64(25):685-9.
* Lulla V, Stanforth A, Prudent N, Johnson D, Luber G. Modeling vulnerable urban populations in the global context of a changing climate. In Innovating for Healthy Urbanization . Roy A, Burke T, McGahan A (Eds.)2015. 193-208. doi: 1007/978-1-4899-7597-3_9
* Houghton A, Prudent N, Scott JE, Wade R, Luber G. Climate change-related vulnerabilities and local environmental public health tracking through GEMSS: A web-based visualization tool. Geog. 2012, 33, 36–44.
* Portier CJ, Thigpen Tart K, Carter SR, Dilworth CH, Grambsch AE, Gohlke J, Hess J, Howard SN, Luber G, Lutz JT, Maslak T, Prudent N, Radtke M, Rosenthal JP, Rowles T, Sandifer PA, Scheraga J, Schramm PJ, Strickman D, Trtanj JM, Whung P-Y. A Human Health Perspective on Climate Change: A Report Outlining the Research Needs on the Human Health Effects of Climate Change. Env. Health/ NIEHS. 2010. Available: niehs.nih.gov/climatereport
* Luber G, Prudent N. Climate change and human health. (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19768168) Trans Am Clin Climatol Assoc. 2009;120:113-7.
Prudent N, Houghton A, Stewart J, Petersen A, Thompson R, Byrne M, Luber G. Addressing climate change and local public health: the Austin Climate Protection Program and the CDC Working Group on Climate Change collaboration. (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19408428) J Environ Health. 2009 Apr;71(8):18-9.
Prudent N. Community acceptance and annual maintenance fee contracts for sustaining improved drinking water sources: an evaluation of the faith-based shallow well program Northern Region, Malawi 2007. Master’s Thesis from Emory University: Rollins School of Public Health. 2008.