Lisa Chasan-Taber

Professor and Chair, Department of Biostatistics and Epidemiology University of Massachusetts Amherst

  • Amherst MA

Lisa Chasan-Taber is an internationally recognized expert on physical activity during pregnancy.

Contact

University of Massachusetts Amherst

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Expertise

Physical Activity and Pregnancy
Reproductive and Perinatal Epidemiology
Gestational Diabetes Mellitus
Physical Activity Epidemiology
Health Equity

Biography

Lisa Chasan-Taber is a reproductive and perinatal epidemiologist and an internationally recognized expert on physical activity during pregnancy and on identifying populations are high risk for developing gestational diabetes.. She has spent the past 20 years actively leading national research teams in the conduct of lifestyle interventions among high-risk, ethnically diverse pregnant women.

Her book, "Writing Grant Proposals in Epidemiology, Preventive Medicine, and Biostatistics," now in its second edition, has been widely praised.

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Education

Harvard University

Sc.D.

Epidemiology

University of Massachusetts Amherst

M.P.H.

Health Policy and Management

University of Pennsylvania

B.S.

Select Recent Media Coverage

Why Pregnant Women Can Try High-Intensity Workouts, Even in the Third Trimester

The Wall Street Journal  online

2024-11-09

Lisa Chasan-Taber, professor and chair of the Department of Biostatistics and Epidemiology at UMass Amherst, comments in an article about exercising during pregnancy. She says women who work out while pregnant face lower risks for complications like gestational diabetes, hypertension and preeclampsia, and decrease their chances of cesarean section and postpartum depression.

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Epidemiologist updates and validates 'gold standard' of prenatal physical activity tools

Medical Xpress  online

2023-06-08

Lisa Chasan-Taber, professor and chair of biostatistics and epidemiology, and her research group used novel and innovative tools—an advanced accelerometer and wearable camera—to assess PPAQ performance. The researchers developed the PPAQ in 2004 as the first validated pregnancy physical activity questionnaire. Listed on the UMass Amherst timeline of research breakthroughs, the PPAQ is considered the gold standard in the field of prenatal physical activity epidemiology.

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Select Publications

Women Need Better Menopause Guidance. Here’s What Doctors Should Do.

Ms. Magazine

Lisa Chasan-Taber

2024-02-01

"Gynecologists in the U.S. receive little formal education about menopausal health, how to reduce symptoms, and the fear around those symptoms. As a result, women and their partners often have misconceptions about how these normal hormonal changes will affect them. I am a researcher who has focused her career on women’s health and, even for a public health professional like myself, it’s been hard to find guidance."

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Update and Novel Validation of a Pregnancy Physical Activity Questionnaire

American Journal of Epidemiology

Lisa Chasan-Taber and others

2023-06-08

The aim of this study was to update and validate the Pregnancy Physical Activity Questionnaire (PPAQ) using novel and innovative accelerometer and wearable camera measures in a free-living setting to improve the measurement performance of this self-report physical activity (PA) method.

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The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on physical activity and sedentary behavior during pregnancy: a prospective study

BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth

2022-12-03

Prior studies evaluating the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on pregnancy physical activity (PA) have largely been limited to internet-based surveys not validated for use in pregnancy. This study used data from the Pregnancy PA Questionnaire Validation study conducted from 2019–2021.

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