I'm Still Not Tired - Larkin Callaghan

Larkin Callaghan recently completed her doctorate in health behavior and public health education at Columbia, focusing on women's health and global health development. With research and program experience in HIV and sexual health, social network building, trauma and violence, drug and alcohol abuse, and how socioeconomic status and history of abuse contribute to health and social mobility, she specializes in women's and adolescent health, population health, communication and social marketing and the health of vulnerable populations - and how they relate to one another. She also works as a UN Correspondent for MediaGlobal, covering issues affecting the least developed countries, with a not-exclusive focus on global health. She posts about public health, sociology and social justice, human rights, research, and gender. She manages the Reproductive Health Daily Tumblr and is a fellow in Health Communication and Epidemiology at Columbia's Mailman School of Public Health, where she writes and uses social and new media to promote research that focuses on health disparities, access and rights. She’s an avid runner and a California loyalist, and also posts longer opinion pieces on I'm Not Tired Yet at https://larkincallaghan.wordpress.com/.
Recent Tweets @LarkinCallaghan
Posts I Like
Posts tagged "abortion"

reprohealthdaily:

Planned Parenthood Action explains its decision to drop the pro-choice/anti-choice/pro-life labels. Thoughts?

rhrealitycheck:

Written by Mary Tuma for RH Reality Check. This diary is cross-posted; commenters wishing to engage directly with the author should do so at the original post.

Published in partnership with The American Independent.

A GOP lawmaker is looking to make Texas the latest state to…

In case there was any doubt about how intent opponents are about overturning Roe v. Wade by systematically enacting more and more restrictions on women’s reproductive rights. Photo courtesy of Guttmacher Institute.

In case there was any doubt about how intent opponents are about overturning Roe v. Wade by systematically enacting more and more restrictions on women’s reproductive rights. Photo courtesy of Guttmacher Institute.