Yonaira
Rivera
Assistant Professor of Communication
- Office:
- Annex B 154
- PHONE:
- 848-932-7612
- EMAIL:
- yonaira.rivera@rutgers.edu
- WEB LINKS:
- Google Scholar ResearchGate Personal Website
Yonaira Rivera’s scholarship focuses on reducing health inequities and improving the well-being of Latinx and underserved communities through health communication initiatives. Her work uses qualitatively-driven, mixed methods and community-based participatory research to study social media health misinformation, cancer control and prevention, and disaster relief. She conducts research in English and Spanish.
Education
Johns Hopkins School of Public Health
PhD, Social & Behavioral Sciences
Emory University
MPH, Behavioral Sciences & Health Education
Rutgers University
BS, Biotechnology
Research
Addressing health inequities and improving the health of underserved populations have always been at the forefront of Yonaira’s work. Her research explores the role of social media as a health communication tool that educates and empowers Latinx audiences. Rivera focuses on effective, theory-driven health communication to understand how engagement with health (mis)information on social media can impact health decisions, as well as how social media can be used to communicate with and mobilize communities before, during and after disasters.
Rivera’s line of work in cancer control and prevention explores how Latinxs engage with and act upon cancer (mis)information they encounter on social media platforms (e.g. Facebook, WhatsApp). Her research suggests that cultural values and other cultural connectors (e.g., language and country of origin) play a salient role in how message factors and source factors influence engagement with cancer (mis)information among Latinxs, as well as in how they assess the credibility of such (mis)information and choose to act upon it. She developed the social media content and context (SoCo) elicitation method as mixed methods approach to surpass the constraints of assessing engagement with health information by only using social media metrics such as likes, comments, or shares. This approach allows for a better representation of how individuals engage with health (mis)information in reality, and how these interactions influence health behaviors.
As a native Puerto Rican, Rivera is committed to the long-term recovery of Puerto Rican communities affected by Hurricane María. She co-founded Puerto Rico Stands and has worked alongside local community leaders to provided them transferable skills and tools to build on their strengths and empower them to create a more resilient community. Her research agenda furthers this work by exploring the role social media platforms play in coordinating and facilitating disaster relief communication efforts.
Research Groups
- CommUnity Health Action Lab (CUHAL)
- Digital Ethnography Working Group
- Health and Wellness Cluster
- Social Media & Society Cluster
Funded Projects
IMPACT-NJ: Improved Policy-based Advancements for Chatbot Technology in New Jersey. New Jersey State Policy Lab, Rutgers University. Direct costs: $25,000 (Ongoing; Co-PI)
Multilingual Health Equity in Large Language Models (LLMs): Enhancing Accuracy and Reliability for Diverse User Interactions. SC&I Collaborative Research Award, Rutgers University. Direct costs: $16,876 (Ongoing; Co-PI)
Contextualizing cancer (mis)information engagement & dissemination among adult Latino social media users. 2020 Cancer Prevention and Control Pilot Award - Rutgers Cancer Institute of New Jersey’s Cancer Center Support Grant (P30 CA072720). Direct costs: $59,998 (2021-2024; PI)
Exploring cancer messaging engagement among Latino adults age 40-75 on Facebook. National Cancer Institute – Center for Reducing Cancer Health Disparities GMaP Region 1 Research Project Support Program (3 P30 CA177558-05S3). Direct costs: $9,259. (2018-2019)
Grassroots and Community Partnerships to Achieve Health Equity in Puerto Rico after Hurricane María: Community Needs Assessment and Capacity Building in Sector Maná by Puerto Rico Stands. Bloomberg American Health Initiative – Johns Hopkins University (Ex-SE-02-19006). Direct costs: $10,000. (2018-2019; Co-PI)
Selected Publications
Rivera, Y. M., Moran, M., Thrul, J., Joshu, C., & Smith, K.C. (2022). Contextualizing Engagement with Health Information on Facebook: Using the Social Media Content and Context Elicitation Method. Journal of Medical Internet Research. DOI: 10.2196/25243; PMID: 35254266, PMCID: PMC8933799
Rivera, Y. M., Moran, M., Thrul, J., Joshu, C., & Smith, K.C. (2022). When engagement leads to action: Understanding the impact of cancer (mis)information among Latino Facebook users. Health Communication. DOI: 10.1080/10410236.2021.1950442; PMID: 34256676, PMCID: PMC8755854
Sutton, J., Rivera, Y. M., Kirk Sell, T., Moran, M., Bennett, D. M., Schoch-Spana, M., Stern, E., & Turetsky, D. (2020). Longitudinal risk communication: A research agenda for communicating in a pandemic. Health Security. DOI: 10.1089/hs.2020.0161; PMID: 33351697
Rivera, Y. M. (2018). Reducing Cancer Health Disparities among U.S. Latinos: A Freireian Approach. International Journal of Human Rights in Healthcare, 11(5), 368-379. DIO: 10.1108/IJHRH-02-2018-0021; PMID: 31032065, PMCID: PMC6485949
Rivera, Y. M., Vélez, H., Canales, J., Jiménez, J. C., Moreno, L., Torres, J., Vadaparampil, S., Muñoz-Antonia, T., & Quinn, G. P. (2015). When a Common Language Is Not Enough: Transcreating Cancer 101 for Communities in Puerto Rico. Journal of Cancer Education, 1-8. DOI 10.1007/s13187-015-0912-2. PMID: 26365291, PMCID: PMC4791206
Awards & Recognitions
Douglass Faculty Fellows Program, Rutgers University, 2024-2025
Recipient of Loan Repayment Program in Health Disparities Research (L60 CA264692; 50% student loan debt repayment), NCI/NIH, 2021-2024
Honoree in recognition for testifying before the U.S. Senate Subcommittee on Communications, Media, and Broadband regarding the impact of misinformation on vaccine hesitancy among Latinx communities, Rutgers University’s Chancellor & Provost Celebration of Faculty Excellence Award Ceremony, 2021
Best Rapid-Fire Oral Presentation at the PRISM Health Symposium, 2020
Doctoral Distinguished Research Award, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, 2019
Ruth L. Kirschstein National Research Service Award (F31 CA224615-01A1, Direct annual costs: $44,524) National Institutes of Health, 2018-2020
Ruth L. Kirschstein National Cancer Institute Predoctoral Fellowship, 2015-2018
Additional Resources
Oral and written testimony at the hearing "Shot of Truth: Communicating Trusted Vaccine Information" held by the Subcommittee on Communications, Media, & Broadband of the U.S. Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, & Transportation (April 15, 2021)
View
Center for Latinx Digital Media's Virtual Seminar Series: Understanding the impact of engagement with cancer (mis)information among Latino Facebook users.
View
National Cancer Institute’s Division of Cancer Control & Population Sciences’ Research in Understudied Populations and Cancer Disparities Webinar Series - Using Social Media and eHealth to Address Health Disparities: Promises and Perils
View
Research Keywords
- Applied research
- Communication Technology
- Community Engagement
- Community-Based Research
- Digital Health Literacy
- Disaster Relief & Response
- Health Communication
- Health Disparities
- Health Misinformation
- Internet
- Latino/a/x/e
- Marginalized and Under-represented Populations
- Public Health
- Qualitative Research
- Social Media Engagement