Posted
05/08/2007
Parra-Medina
honored with 2007 South Carolina
Women of Achievement Award

Dr. Deborah M.
Parra-Medina, associate professor in the Arnold School’s Department of
Health Promotion, Education, and Behavior, has been honored with a 2007
South Carolina Women of Achievement Award for promoting the health and
well-being of women.
Parra-Medina was
among five women recognized for outstanding achievements by
the S.C. Commission Wednesday at a luncheon at Columbia College in
conjunction with the third annual conference, “A Seat at the Table,”
sponsored by the Columbia College Alliance for Women.
In its nomination
of Parra-Medina, the USC Women’s Studies Program and Partnership Council
stated, “As an American child of Mexican immigrants, her life’s work is
to illuminate the roles of race, ethnicity, class, and gender in health
and health behaviors, particularly in the Latino communities of the U.S.
and to advocate for the health and education of families of lowersocio-economic
status.”
Sharing the honors
with Parra-Medina for promoting women’s health was Victoria “Vickie” Borus, executive director of the S.C. Coalition Against Domestic
Violence and Sexual Assault.
Other Women of
Achievement honorees included:
• Columbia attorney Sue “Corky”
Erwin Harper of Columbia, for
promoting economic autonomy for women;
• Former S.C. Superintendent of
Education Izez Tenenbaum and Spartanburg attorney
Cathy McCabe for promoting
political participation by women;
•
Lexington School District One
Superintendent Dr. Karen Woodward, winner of a Pioneer Award for her
efforts to improve public education in South Carolina.
After receiving her
doctorate in epidemiology in 1998, Parra-Medina and her family relocated
from San Diego to the University of South Carolina where she received
the first joint appointment in Women’s Studies and the Arnold School.
During
Parra-Medina’s career at USC she has helped build a statewide network of
Latinos who are working on health issues. She also has been the
principal investigator on eight major USC research grants totaling at
$3.3 million, and she has served as a co-investigator on numerous
others.
She has worked on
the West Columbia Project, a collaborative research effort of Women’s
Studies core faculty and the West Columbia community to promote the
empowerment, health and well-being of women and girls in the area.
She has been an
advisor on the Minority Mentoring Planning Project for the National
Cancer Institute and has served on numerous university, department and
program committees.
In 2005,
Parra-Medina was recognized for her work as a role model and mentor to
young Latinos by the Hispanic Leadership Council which gave her the Most
Influential Latino Award for Outstanding Service to the Latino Community
in South Carolina.
Prior to that, in
2002, she received the Faculty Service Award by the Arnold School, the
Community Service Award by the South Carolina Public Health Association
and the Women’s Studies Faculty Teaching Award.
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