UB/Roswell Park Researcher Wins Fellowship to Study Health Inequalities Associated With Cannabis Legalization

BUFFALO, N.Y. – A University at Buffalo/Roswell Park Comprehensive Cancer Center researcher and first-generation college student has been awarded the Robert Wood Johnson Health Policy Research Scholars (HPRS) Fellowship for health equity research.

Michelle Goulette, PhD candidate in the Cancer Sciences program at Roswell Park, received the prestigious fellowship available to second-year doctoral students to fund her research focused on cannabis.

“This award is a well-deserved testament to Michelle’s dedication to her work,” says H Fogarty, Goulette’s adviser in UB’s Office of Fellowships and Scholarships. “Michelle tackled the application process — which involved rigorous rounds of application revisions and multiple interviews — with admirable tenacity and verve, qualities that I am certain she applies in her work as well.”

“It is clear from hearing Michelle talk about her goals that she is passionate about her research and health equity, and I admire her empathetic and person-centered approach to her work.”

Goulette is contributing to research in Roswell Park’s Center for Translational Research on Cannabis and Cancer, under the mentorship of Danielle Smith, PhD, MPH, assistant professor of oncology in Roswell Park’s Department of Health Behavior.

“With the support of the HPRS program, Michelle will address emerging health equity issues in the cannabis sciences through innovative and timely research that will have a direct impact on what is going on in our community,” says Smith. Her exceptional enthusiasm and passion for working with people from historically underserved populations, along with her lived experience, makes her a superb candidate for this award.”

Goulette is another example of how the university’s best and brightest have often chosen work reflecting personal experience. As a child in a rural community, Goulette endured poor access to health care, “which is often the case for first-generation students like me,” she wrote in an application essay.

“This lack of resources affected my ability to be successful in school because I was dealing with an undiagnosed learning disability, ADHD [attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder],” Goulette said. “I felt an immense amount of responsibility from my parents to pursue an undergraduate degree, as I would be the first in my family to pursue higher education. Nevertheless, the pressure from my parents and their lack of awareness of the college application process, as well as discouragement from my high school counselors, have made my university journey challenging.”

Goulette set her sights on attending and graduating from a State University of New York school. She did more than that.
“I completed my first bachelor’s degree in public communications in three years by working three jobs to pay for my housing and tuition, all while being undiagnosed with ADHD,” she said.

When Goulette began work as a marketing representative, she realized she had pursued a field that failed to inspire her.

“I realized if I truly wanted to find my passion I would have to head back to school. This is when I decided to complete a second bachelor’s degree in anthropology,” she wrote. “During this time, I discovered the field of medical anthropology research which became my passion. I made it my mission to learn how my education could improve health care systems in my community.”

Funded by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, the Health Policy Research Scholars program provides funding and professional development to an interdisciplinary cohort of underrepresented doctoral students contributing to health equity through their research.

“HPRS is unique in their definition of ‘a culture of health’ and who they see as integral to advancing it,” says Fogarty. “While similar programs are often aimed at exclusively funding students from medical or STEM fields, HPRS is intentionally interdisciplinary and inclusive, demonstrating their belief that health equity is a collaborative effort that is enriched by diversity of thought, methodology, and identity.”

Besides funding, the program offers training and networking opportunities that enable HPRS scholars to forge connections across disciplines that will be invaluable in pursuing their future work, according to Fogarty. The fellowship will support Goulette’s work on “barriers to accessing cannabis related health information and health care services [that] have disproportionately affected racial minorities and low socioeconomic groups in the United States.”

Barriers fuel observed disparities in all aspects of cancer care, according to Goulette. She hopes that her work will inform equitable policy efforts to facilitate access, mitigate costs, improve quality of care, enhance quality of life and create health educational opportunities to promote person-centered informed decision making.

“I value health equity because I do not want anyone to feel powerless to their situation, like I did,” she says. “Knowledge needs to be shared about health care, and systems in the U.S. need to be improved for this to happen.”

Now Goulette gets her wish. As part of the HPRS program she will “work with other individuals who are driven by this goal: achieving health equity for all.”

The post UB/Roswell Park Researcher Wins Fellowship to Study Health Inequalities Associated With Cannabis Legalization appeared first on Buffalo Healthy Living Magazine.

Related articles

Headlines for January 27, 2026

Trump Admin Removes Border Patrol Commander Greg Bovino from...

Speculation grows over who ICE hired to build ‘Trump’s army’: ‘That’s why they’re masked’



Speculation is growing in the wake of another fatal shooting in Minnesota that the Department of Homeland Security is hiring pardoned Jan. 6 rioters as immigration agents.

Border Patrol commander Greg Bovino confirmed that the two agents who shot 37-year-old Alex Pretti were already back on duty, but not in Minneapolis, and has refused to identify them. Journalists who have covered pro-Donald Trump militant groups suspect some of the agents involved in immigration crackdowns are drawn from those extremist ranks.

"Because I filmed the Proud Boys for years, because I was in Charlottesville and at the January 6 riot, and spent five months filming the ICE agents in Federal Plaza I’m convinced they are the same people," said independent visual journalist Sandi Bachom. "It’s impossible to find a whole new army of aggressive, violent, immature, Call to Duty Trump sycophants. That’s why they’re masked. People are gonna start figuring it out. That’s why he pardoned them all."

"I remember thinking when I got back from January 6, well Hitler had an army and Trump doesn’t," Bachom added. "He does now."

Trump pardoned about 1,500 defendants for Jan. 6-related offenses in one of his first official acts upon returning to the White House, and Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-MD) two weeks ago – following the shooting of 37-year-old Renee Good by a veteran immigration agent – asked administration officials whether the Department of Homeland Security was actively recruiting pro-Trump extremists.

"The American people deserve to know how many of these violent insurrectionists have been given guns and badges by this Administration," Raskin wrote in a letter to Attorney General Pam Bondi and Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem. "Who is hiding behind these masks? How many of them were among the violent rioters who attacked the Capitol on January 6th and were convicted of their offenses?"

Senate Democrats have threatened to withhold funding for DHS without major reforms to ICE, including a possible ban on masking, and state legislatures are advancing bills to ban federal agents from obscuring their identities while on duty, and the secrecy surrounding Pretti's killers has set off alarms about their actual identities.

"There is another, more disturbing prospect: Are ICE agents actual bad dudes the administration hired rapidly with no background checks — possibly criminal (maybe pardoned J6ers?) — and the administration doesn’t want that information getting out?" wondered journalist Robert A. George. "IOW, the masks represent a LITERAL coverup. Now, we know this isn’t universally the case: Jonathan Ross who shot Renee Good is an ICE veteran. But the spiriting out of Minneapolis the agents who killed Alex Pretti is certainly…curious."

"This is purely speculation on my part, but hey, I didn’t call them domestic terrorists or anything," George added.

Their suspicions seemed to be shared by many others.

"Anyone else notice how the Proud Boys, Three Percenters, Oath Keepers, Patriot Front, etc. were always out there marching to support and protect law enforcement...until recently?" asked University of Washington biologist Carl T. Bergstrom. "They're never out there supporting ICE. It's so odd, like Superman and Clark Kent."

The Atlantic's Robert F. Worth spoke to an activist on the ground in Minneapolis who agreed.

"It became clear very quickly that ICE is the Proud Boys, the Boogaloo boys," said Dan, who trained as a legal observer but asked to keep his last name shielded. "They’ve given them uniforms and let them run wild."

Mediaite One Sheet: New Smartphone Video? New Narrative Battle

Mediaite One Sheet, Jan 27: New Alex Pretti footage spans a new narrative battle but reminds smartphone footage as arguably the most powerful variable in news.

The post Mediaite One Sheet: New Smartphone Video? New Narrative Battle first appeared on Mediaite.