Cherlie Magny-Normilus
PhD FNP-BC FAAN
cherlie.magny.normilus@nyu.edu 1 212 998 5394433 First Ave
New York, NY 10010
United States
Cherlie Magny-Normilus's additional information
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Cherlie Magny-Normilus, PhD, FNP-BC, FAAN is an Assistant Professor at NYU Rory Meyers College of Nursing, a board-certified family nurse practitioner, and an NIH-funded behavioral nurse scientist. She leads a program of research focused on optimizing cardiometabolic health self-management among marginalized and understudied populations. Her work examines how
sociocultural factors, psychological determinants, and structural conditions interact to shape type 2 diabetes (T2D) prevention and self-management behaviors and downstream health outcomes. Grounded in community-based participatory research, she is designing and pilot-testing targeted interventions to improve diabetes self-management while simultaneously targeting the social and structural drivers of cardiometabolic inequity.
The flagship of her portfolio is An Santé ak Dyabèt (ASAD), “Let’s Live Healthy with Diabetes,” the first known multilevel, culturally and linguistically responsive T2D self-management education program developed specifically for Haitian American adults. Supported by a NIH-funded K99/R00, ASAD integrates behavioral theory, community-engaged design, and pragmatic implementation strategies to strengthen T2D self-care behaviors, improve glycemic control, and reduce T2D-related complications. A distinctive methodologic signature of this work is the use of continuous glucose monitoring paired with ecological momentary assessment (EMA) to phenotype, and sociocultural and environmental factors translate into measurable glycemic variability. This behavioral-physiologic profile, not previously documented in this population, reframes the standard A1c-only paradigm of diabetes monitoring in marginalized communities.
Magny-Normilus is equally committed to building durable nursing infrastructure globally. As co-director of the Regis College Haiti Project, an international nurse faculty partnership funded by the W.K. Kellogg Foundation and the Clinton Bush Haiti Fund, she helped advance the credentials of 37 nurse educators across every region of Haiti. Her work was formally recognized by the Government of Haiti and acknowledged in the United States with the City of Boston’s Citation for Unwavering Commitment to Immigrant Health.
Magny-Normilus regularly presents her work at the American Diabetes Association, American Public Health Association, Eastern Nursing Research Society, and Transcultural Nursing Society conferences. Her research appears in peer-reviewed journals spanning nursing, public health, and patient safety. Prior to joining NYU Meyers, she completed postdoctoral training at Yale School of Nursing and held faculty positions at Boston College Connell School of Nursing and Regis College.
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PhD, University of Massachusetts LowellMSN in Family Nurse Practitioner, Regis CollegeBSN, Curry CollegeASN, Brockton Hospital School of Nursing
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Underserved populations
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American Academy of Nurse PractitionersAmerican Diabetes AssociationAssociation of Diabetes Care & Education SpecialistsAmerican Nurses AssociationAmerican Public Health AssociationEastern Nursing Research SocietyNational Black Nurses Association – Lifetime MemberNew England Black Nurses Association (NERBNA)Sigma Theta Tau InternationalTranscultural Nursing Society
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Faculty Honors Awards
Academic Early Career Scholarship Award, Massachusetts Association of Colleges of Nursing (2024)Citation for Unwavering Commitment to Health Care, City of Boston (2023)Excellence in Nursing Research Award, New England Black Nurses Association, Inc (2023)Fellow, New York Academy of Medicine (2022)Health Disparities Research Institute Scholar, National Institute on Minority Health (2020)Humanitarian Award, Aesclepius Medical Society (AMS) (2019)Dean’s Award, University of Massachusetts Lowell Solomont School of Nursing (2018)PhD Program Award, University of Massachusetts Lowell Solomont School of Nursing (2018)Dedication and Contributions to the Advancement of Nursing Education throughout Haiti Haitian Government Office of the Ministry of Haitians Living Abroad (2016)Changemakers, Inducted to the Haitian Roundtable’s 1804 List of Changemakers (2015)Volunteerism and Service, Nurse.com Regional GEM Awards Program Finalist (2014)Excellence in Nursing Leadership Award, New England Regional Black Nurse Association, Inc (2014)Ujima Award, Brigham and Women’s Hospital (2011)Graduate Student Leadership Award, Regis College Graduate (2011) -
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Publications
Associations Between Weight Discrimination and Health Outcomes by Racial and Ethnic Groups: A Scoping Review
Failed retrieving data.Continuous Glucose Monitor Use and Diabetes Self-Management Behaviors in Adults Managed in Specialty Clinic: Qualitative Descriptive Study
Failed retrieving data.Self-Management of Chronic Illness Among Chinese Immigrants: An Integrative Review
Failed retrieving data.Diabetes Management in a Social Context-Exploring Glycemic Indices
Failed retrieving data.Diabetes Management in a Social Context-Exploring Glycemic Indices.
Failed retrieving data.Essential elements and outcomes of psychological safety in the healthcare practice setting: A systematic review
Failed retrieving data.Exploring Perspectives and Challenges to Type 2 Diabetes Self-management in Haitian American Immigrants in the COVID-19 Era: An Emic View
Failed retrieving data.A Health Systems Approach to Nurse-Led Implementation of Diabetes Prevention and Management in Vulnerable Populations
Failed retrieving data.Race and ethnic disparities in insulin pump and continuous glucose monitor use between 2017 and 2024: a systematic review with a focus on health equity
Failed retrieving data.An Sante ak Dyabét Self-Management Education Program.
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