UofL faculty profile – UofL News Fri, 17 Apr 2026 17:45:05 +0000 en-US hourly 1 UofL psychologist has high hopes for new statewide council /post/uofltoday/uofl-psychologist-has-high-hopes-for-new-statewide-council/ Fri, 03 Apr 2020 14:50:42 +0000 http://www.uoflnews.com/?p=49988 When the Kentucky Eating Disorders Council first convenes this summer, Cheri Levinson can be proud of her role in establishing it, the nation’s second.

The UofL clinical psychologist worked for the successful passage last month of Senate Bill 82, which Kentucky Governor Andy Beshear signed into law March 27.

Levinson testified before a joint legislative committee and helped others advocating for the council, believing it will help ensure attention and services are brought to Kentuckians often hidden in their suffering from what she described as “a silent epidemic.”

“It was pretty amazing,” Levinson said. “The senators and representatives were very supportive. You could tell the people there cared.”

All sorts of people – young, old and from all walks of life — have some sort of eating disorder, which can be anorexia, bulimia, binge eating or other feeding disorders. And while the public might consider those physical problems, the truth is they often are rooted in emotional issues and anxiety – and are preventable and treatable.

, assistant professor of psychological and brain sciences, also is founding director of UofL’s . There she and graduate students help serve clients, also through UofL’s Noble Kelley Psychological Services Center, and they research better, novel ways to support them,

For example, the laboratory group is piloting a tailored approach that uses a smartphone app to deliver a personalized treatment. There also are support groups and other treatment studies, all currently offered online, particularly during the coronavirus-related adjustments.

Levinson also is clinical director for a private practice, Louisville Center for Eating Disorders, which will have a role in the new council’s initial makeup. The center will suggest as members some names of people who have eating disorders or those with experience working with them to ensure they have a voice in the council’s work.

The attaches the council to the Kentucky Cabinet for Health and Family Services, which will have representatives on it. Others on the 19-member body include representatives from insurance, health care, social work, education and dietetics. “Getting all of those important people together in the room – just to get all those people together is a big deal,” she said.

The council would help oversee eating disorder awareness, education and prevention programs; identify strategies to improve access to diagnostic and treatment programs; help the cabinet identify research projects; collaborate on data-based research; recommend legislative or regulatory changes; and apply for grant funding.

“The ultimate charge of the bill is to create more and better treatment,” Levinson said. Beyond UofL and her private clinic, Levinson said Kentucky doesn’t offer much in the way of comprehensive treatment for eating disorders, and many people with disorders who require more intensive treatment have to travel as far as to Missouri, the first state to offer an eating disorders council.

However, Levinson believes that higher awareness and better training in communities might help people screen for and recognize the early warning signs so they can intervene before the disorders develop.

“Anxiety is ‘the’ predisposing factor for an eating disorder,” she said.

Levinson cited studies that indicated 50% of students in middle school say they are on a diet to lose weight and that 50% of middle and high school students report some type of eating disorder behavior.

“Eating disorders are treatable,” she said. With early prevention, proper care and family support, people can conquer the illnesses that otherwise could lead to an array of other health problems.

“You can recover, and people don’t have to live with this for the rest of their lives,” she said.

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UofL professor takes the stage as an ASL interpreter /post/uofltoday/uofl-professor-to-take-the-stage-as-an-asl-interpreter/ Wed, 10 Jul 2019 17:49:22 +0000 http://www.uoflnews.com/?p=47451 Jessica Minges is the director of ASLIS Undergraduate Studies at UofL. On occasion, she also turns into a rock star of sorts. 

Minges is an American Sign Language interpreter who performs at a variety of concerts and music festivals, including Waterfront Wednesday, Bonnaroo and the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival. She has also worked with Tom Petty, Phish, The Avett Brothers and other musicians. 

Earlier this week, the Courier Journal included Minges in a story about these interpreters and how they bring songs to life for deaf fans. 

The are more common at music festivals and concerts than they were in the past, which has drawn more deaf and heard-of-hearing music fans to the events.

There was a turning point in 1990 when the Americans with Disabilities Act passed, requiring venues to provide interpreters if they were requested. Now, however, many venues add interpreters on their own. 

There will be two such interpreters at this weekend’s Forecastle Festival downtown. They will be focused on the main stage, but will accept requests from deaf patrons to work the smaller stages as well. 

Minges told the publication that such work requires a lot of studying — of set lists, of lyrics, of previous performances and so on. 

“Songs are like poetry and have different meanings than maybe the words say,” she told the CJ. 

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