Rachel Castaneda

Associate Professor
Department of Psychology
Azusa Pacific University
United States of America

Professor Healthcare
Biography

Rachel Castaneda, Ph.D., is a research psychologist who joined the Department of Psychology as an associate professor in 2011. She brings extensive training in public health, developmental and health psychology, and addiction medicine/psychiatry. Her teaching and research integrate qualitative and quantitative research methods, with a focus on the application of behavioral and social-system-level theories to understand the etiology and maintenance of risky behaviors among diverse populations. Primary interests include tertiary prevention and disease management approaches, including wellness/health promotion; adolescent and young adult health; and cultural and social impacts on health status, including socioeconomic status, access, gender, and racial/ethnic health disparities. She is researching the recovery from substance use, taking a developmental social approach, and serves as the principal investigator on a five-year, NIH-funded grant to develop and test the utility of a mobile-based continuing care recovery support program (text messaging) for youth transitioning out of substance abuse treatment. She is also an affiliated scholar in the Integrated Substance Abuse Programs within the Department of Medicine and Public Health at the University of California, Los Angeles.

Research Intrest

Adolescent and Young Adult Health Status, Disparities in Health, Health Promotion and Disease Prevention, Program Development and Evaluation, Research Methods (Emphasis on Longitudinal and Survey Methods), Substance Use Disorders

List of Publications
Gonzales R, Glik D, Davoudi M, Ang A. Media literacy and public health: Integrating theory, research, and practice for tobacco control. American Behavioral Scientist. 2004 Oct;48(2):189-201.
Rawson RA, Gonzales R, Brethen P. Treatment of methamphetamine use disorders: an update. Journal of substance abuse treatment. 2002 Sep 30;23(2):145-50.