Research Signature Areas
Health and Well-being of Children and Youth
Our researchers are dedicated to advancing the health and well-being of all children and youth, which lays the foundation for health and well-being over many decades of adult life.
College of Health faculty focus on the critical roles that social policies, families, educational settings, and communities play in promoting positive early child and youth development.
Child-focused researchers study self-regulation, early education and readiness for school, parenting styles and behaviors, housing, and poverty.
Faculty also have expertise in improving quality of life through physical activity and motor skill development and providing those with developmental and acquired disabilities equitable access to play and mobility, including toy- and game-based technologies.
Because youth is a critical period connecting childhood and adulthood, faculty focus on healthy and risky behaviors of teens and young adults.
For example, some study behaviors such as safer sexual activity (e.g., preventing sexually transmitted infections and unintended pregnancies, promoting sexual health for LGBTQ+ individuals, treating hepatitis C) and substance use (e.g., vaping and smoking, marijuana, misuse of prescription stimulants or opioids).
Others focus on leadership development, social belonging/isolation, and healthy relationships with peers and partners.
News and stories
Recent health and well-being of children and youth news and stories.
Brian Primack served as senior author on a study documenting vaping devices shaped like sippy cups being marketed to young children on Instagram, published in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine.
David Rothwell has received a competitive Russell Sage Foundation grant to study how paid family leave policies affect mothers' employment and use of public assistance in Oregon.
Megan McClelland and colleagues published two new studies on early childhood self-regulation and executive function, including research spanning Poland, Iran and the United States.
OSU's Early Learning Systems Initiative was featured in the Oregon Early Childhood Inclusion 2026 Impact Report for training thousands of early childhood professionals and strengthening family engagement across Oregon.
Kinesiology professor and school head Megan MacDonald discusses her research on physical activity and children with disabilities, the IMPACT program, and why getting kids moving starts with meeting them where they are.
Mehwish Dawood, a doctoral student in human development and family sciences, presented research on a mental health intervention for flood-affected women in Pakistan at the SSWR 2026 conference in Washington, D.C.
Recent publications
Recent health and well-being of children and youth publications
(This is not an exhaustive list. Visit individual faculty profiles for more extensive lists of their publications.)
2026
Projects, programs and laboratories
Health and well-being of children and youth projects, programs and laboratories.
(This is not an exhaustive list. Contact individual faculty for more information of their current and past research.)
- Research group
2CW Research Group
The Child Welfare and Child Well-being (2CW) research group seeks to generate knowledge and utilize evidence to better support children, adolescents and their families, especially those facing adversity. The ultimate goal, therefore, is to improve Child Welfare and enhance Child Well-being.
Director: Brianne Kothari, PhD, MA
Website: 2CW Research Group
- Research laboratory
Children and Youth with Disabilities Laboratory
The Children and Youth with Disabilities Laboratory is focused on improving quality of life for children and youth with and without disabilities through physical activity.
Director: Megan MacDonald, PhD
- Research project
College students for cancer prevention: promoting the HPV vaccine
The goal of this project is to implement a policy, system or environmental change to increase awareness and promotion of the HPV vaccine among OSU college students.
- Research group
Connect Research Group
The Connect Research Group aims to identify ways to support children, families, and communities to overcome adversity and build resilience through connection.
Director: Shannon Lipscomb, PhD
Website: The Connect Research Group
- Research laboratory
Disability and Mobility Do-it-Yourself Co-Op
We believe that mobility is a fundamental human right and a radical paradigm shift removing the mobility disparity for children with disabilities is imperative. Our mission is to provide children with disabilities with equitable, equal, and inclusive access to mobility and play.
Director: Sam Logan, PhD
- Research group
Family Policy Group
The Family Policy Group is a network of faculty and students who seek to advance the study of family policy at Oregon State University.
Website: Family Policy Group