Haeok Lee
PhD RN FAAN
Professor
hl5209@nyu.edu
1 212 998 5714
433 FIRST AVENUE
NEW YORK, NY 10010
United States
Haeok Lee's additional information
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Haeok Lee, FAAN, PhD, RN, is a Professor at the NYU Rory Meyers College of Nursing. She is an experienced nurse behavioral scientist with extensive clinical and research experience focusing on populations affected by health disparities. Her primary research addresses health inequity issues among immigrant populations through theory and community-based participatory research. Prof. Lee is a pioneer in developing cultural and social context specific storytelling videos for encouraging health behavior changes, specifically in immigrant and African populations.
Lee initiated cancer research and research capacity building based on her Fulbright Scholarship for Africa from 2017-2000 and recently completed an R21 (1R21NR018734) grant, a pilot RCT, and an mHealth delivered storytelling intervention to promote cervical cancer screening among Malawian women living with HIV. Currently, she serves as a site PI of the Asian Cohort Alzheimer’s disease project (ACAD: U19-AG079774) to recruit 5,081 older Asian adults across the U.S. and Canada. The NYU site focuses on working with the Korean American subpopulation. The study collects DNA, plasma biomarkers, and genotypes, as well as social factors and clinical diagnostic information. For more information read the article NYU Meyers joins NIH-funded multisite study of Alzheimer’s disease in Asian Americans.
Lee mentors faculty, postdoctoral scholars, PhD students, and undergraduate students from diverse racial/ethnic backgrounds and from various disciplines. She has sponsored overseas visiting scholars.
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Post Doctoral fellowship, University of California San FranciscoPhD, University of California San FranciscoMA, Yonsei University School of EducationBSN, Chosun University
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American Academy of NursingAmerican Association of Public HealthAmerican Alzheimer’s AssociationThe Greater New York Korean Nurses Association
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Faculty Honors Awards
Distinguished Editorial Board Award, Asian Pacific Journal of Oncology (2024)American Nurses Association, Massachusetts Excellence in Nursing Research Awards (2022)The 27th Annual Scientific Conference of Eastern Nursing Research Society (2015)Fellow of American Academy of Nursing (2013)The 24th Annual Scientific Conference of Eastern Nursing Research Society (2012)Excellent Chosun Alumni for Contribution in Education and Social Justice (2012) -
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Publications
International collaboration for home gare education, part I : Creating the partnership
AbstractLee, H., Hwang, A., Pierce, C. A., & Fitzpatrick, J. J. (1997). In Journal of Professional Nursing (Vols. 13, Issues 4, pp. 256-261). 10.1016/S8755-7223(97)80096-8AbstractThis two-part series describes the collaborative summer home care nursing program for Korean nurses conducted by the Frances Payne Bolton School of Nursing, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH, in cooperation with the College of Nursing of Yonsei University, Seoul, Korea. Part I focuses on the development of the collaboration, and part II focuses on the content of the three-week summer home care program and describes related issues and problems as well as suggests solutions. The series concludes with the findings on the program from the postprogram evaluations of students, preceptors, and patients. The collaborative educational program was developed to give Korean home care nurses an opportunity to gain clinical experience in home care nursing in the United States so that they could learn how to deliver better-quality home care for patients and their informal caregivers. Therefore, the program focused on practice-oriented lectures and clinical experiences.Learning from other lands. Caring for elderly demented Koreans.
AbstractLee, H., Lee, H., Kim, S., & You, K. S. (1997). In Journal of gerontological nursing (Vols. 23, Issues 9, pp. 21-31). 10.3928/0098-9134-19970901-08AbstractThe aims of the study reported here were to describe the socio-demographic characteristics of caregivers of demented elders in Korea and their care recipients and to compare the positive and negative meanings and outcomes of the caregiving experiences of caregivers who had admitted their elderly demented relative to a nursing home (G1: n = 24) and caregivers still caring for their elderly demented relatives at home (G2: n = 30). Most caregivers were female (80%), married (89%), and related to the care receiver as daughter-in-law (39%), daughter (22%), wife (15%), son (13%), or neighbor (6%). Social class differences were found between the home care and nursing home groups: the upper classes were significantly more likely to have placed their demented elder in a nursing home, whereas the low social classes were more likely to keep taking care of their demented elder at home instead of placing them in a nursing home. Caregivers who had admitted their relative to a nursing home (G1) reported significantly more difficulties from disturbed sleep, disrupted children's studies, and limited personal life when they were caring for the elder at home (p < .05). Caregivers in the home care group (G2) had significantly greater satisfaction in serving as a model for their children and practicing religion (p < .05), and they also reported a better relationship with the care receiver than those who have placed their demented elder in a nursing home, although the difference in this case was not significant.Typical and atypical clinical signs and symptoms of myocardial infarction and delayed seeking of professional care among blacks
AbstractLee, H., & Lee, H. O. (1997). In American Journal of Critical Care (Vols. 6, Issue 1, pp. 7-13). 10.4037/ajcc1997.6.1.7AbstractBACKGROUND: Despite the fact that the effectiveness of thrombolytic therapy for acute myocardial infarction is inversely related to the time between the onset of signs and symptoms and definitive therapy, long delays in seeking treatment have been reported consistently. A variety of reasons for the delays have been suggested. Because such delays are associated with longer hospital stays and higher mortality and morbidity, interventions that reduce delays are especially important. PURPOSE: To examine research on patients with myocardial infarction who delay seeking professional treatment and the factors related to the delay, and to review studies indicating that black patients have premonitory clinical signs and symptoms of myocardial infarction and changes in the structure and function of the cardiovascular system that are different from those in whites. METHODS: Studies were reviewed by using MEDLINE and by doing a manual search of relevant research journals in cardiovascular, nursing, and behavioral medicine published since 1970. Data published by the United States Department of Health and Human Services and the Agency for Health Care Policy and Research were also reviewed. RESULTS: Although the lengths of the delays have varied considerably, blacks have generally experienced longer delays than whites between acute onset of signs and symptoms of myocardial infarction and arrival at the emergency department. Studies show that black patients have a lower incidence of classic chest pain or discomfort but an increased incidence of dyspnea, whereas white patients are much more likely to complain of chest pain. CONCLUSION: Culturally sensitive public education about typical and atypical premonitory clinical signs and symptoms of myocardial infarction and the significance of early treatment of myocardial infarction in blacks is needed.Intraventricular thrombus after cocaine-induced myocardial infarction
AbstractLee, H., Lee, H. o., Eisenberg, M. J., Drew, D., & Schiller, N. B. (1995). In American Heart Journal (Vols. 129, Issues 2, pp. 403-405). 10.1016/0002-8703(95)90025-XAbstract~Serial assessment of left ventricular function after myocardial infarction
AbstractLee, H., Lee, H. o., Eisenberg, M. J., & Schiller, N. B. (1995). In American Heart Journal (Vols. 130, Issues 5, pp. 999-1002). 10.1016/0002-8703(95)90200-7AbstractLeft ventricular (LV) function is an important predictor of morbidity and mortality after myocardial infarction (MI). Changes in LV function have been examined during the early and late phases after MI, but serial measurements of LV function during the subacute period have not been performed. To assess sequential changes in LV function during the subacute period after MI, we used quantitative two-dimensional echocardiography to examine 22 patients over a 1-year period. Twenty-one of the 22 patients had a Q-wave MI. Eleven had an anterior MI and 10 had an inferior MI; their peak creatine phosphokinase (CPK) was 1213 mlU/ml ± 14. Three weeks after acute MI, LV ejection fraction (LVEF) had increased from 45% to 52%. Seven of 19 patients showed an LVEF -
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Media
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