Sherry Pagoto, Ph.D.

Professor of Allied Health Sciences University of Connecticut

  • Storrs CT

Leveraging technology for health promotion and disease prevention

Contact

University of Connecticut

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Biography

Dr. Pagoto is a licensed clinical psychologist, professor, and social media researcher. She is currently a Professor in the Department of Allied Health Sciences at the University of Connecticut and Director of the UConn Center for mHealth and Social Media. In 2019, she was President of the Society of Behavioral Medicine, the leading organization for research at the intersection of behavioral science and health. Her research focuses on leveraging technology in the development and delivery of behavioral interventions targeting diet, physical activity, and cancer prevention. She has developed two mobile apps for weight management and a comprehensive weight loss program that is deliverable via social media platforms. She has had federal funding for her program of research for 17 consecutive years and has published 200+ papers in peer-reviewed journals. She has received several awards for her work including The Obesity Society Pioneer in mHealth/eHealth Award in 2014, Society of Behavioral Medicine Early Career/Young Investigator Award in 2006, and the Western Michigan University Psychology Department Distinguished Alumni Award in 2011. Devoted to science communication, she has bylines in the Washington Post, USA Today, US News and World Report, Chronicle of Higher Education, STAT News, Times Higher Education, MedCityNews, and Psychology Today.

Areas of Expertise

Health Behavior
Sun Safety
Skin Cancer Prevention
Digital Health
Social Media
Exercise
Diet
Obesity

Education

University of Illinois at Chicago/Hines VA Hospital

Post-Doctoral Research Fellow

2003

Western Michigan University

Ph.D.

Clinical Psychology

2001

Western Michigan University

M.A.

Clinical Psychology

1998

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Affiliations

  • National Council for Skin Cancer Prevention: Co-Director, Tan-Free Skin Smart Campus Initiative
  • Society of Behavioral Medicine: Board of Directors

Accomplishments

Mentoring Women Faculty Award

2017
Awarded by the Women’s Faculty Committee, UMass Medical School

Distinguished Service Award

2016
Awarded by the Society of Behavioral Medicine

Obesity Society mHealth/eHealth Pioneer Award

2014
Awarded by the Obesity Society

Social

Media

Media Appearances

Rethinking weight and health in the age of Ozempic

WNPR - Where We Live  radio

2024-03-08

According to the National Institutes of Health, average body weight drastically increased across the board for men and women during the pandemic lockdown.

Simply eating less and exercising more hasn’t been that effective when it comes to weight loss. In efforts to fight weight stigma, doctors are embracing a new idea that weight loss isn’t all about willpower and health is defined by more than just someone’s weight.

In 2021, the FDA approved Semaglutide for weight loss for the general population. Doctors and patients are flocking to get this medication.

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Unpacking the psychology of obesity

WNPR - Where We Live  radio

2022-12-05

Doctors and scientists are increasingly seeing obesity as a complex disease that needs to be treated as such.

Today, we talk about the psychology of obesity, and emotional eating. We learn about binge eating disorder and how stress and trauma can impact our metabolism and how we eat.

We hear from Dr. Sherry Pagoto, Licensed clinical psychologist and professor at University of Connecticut. She researches weight management.

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Digital Tools Track Calories, Exercise And Sleep – But How Much Is Too Much?

Health Planet  online

2021-10-25

But some studies have shown using an app to track diet can increase vegetable consumption and that using digital health monitoring tools more frequently was linked to weight loss in behavioral obesity treatment.

“There’s a saying in behavioral circles: What can be measured, can be moved,” said Dr. Sherry Pagoto, a professor at the University of Connecticut and director of its Center for mHealth and Social Media.

“And so we always want, as a first step, we need to measure your behavior, so we can figure out how much you’re doing it. And then we can make a plan to try to change that behavior, but it’s hard to change if we don’t have any way of measuring it.”

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Articles

What Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce Get Right About Love

Psychology Today

2025-02-14

As the Kansas City Chiefs descended into a crushing Super Bowl defeat, all cameras were on Taylor Swift’s worried glances at her beau, Travis Kelce, the Chief’s tight end. The reverse scene was on display at Swift’s Eras tour last summer, with Kelce swaying and fist-pumping on the sidelines. Their appearances in each other’s arenas pull mixed reviews. Swifties swoon while some football fans boo when Taylor's mug appears on the jumbotron. Regardless of which camp you’re in, the Swift-Kelce merger teaches us something worth noting at a time when modern relationships are in crisis. Marriage rates recently hit a 50-year low,1 “gray divorce”2 rates have doubled since 1990, and Gen Z is busy perfecting the “situationship,” a coupling devoid of emotional intimacy and commitment. Every generation seems pretty burned out on relationships.

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My Boyfriend of 7 Years Vanished From My Life—Taylor Swift Helped Me

Newsweek

2024-07-16

Grief is like a stench that lingers until you air it out. Dr. Jeffrey Gardere, clinical psychologist suggests taking a grieving friend on "vent walks," where you allow the friend to air it out without judgment.

Disenfranchised grief is accompanied by shame and loneliness and often lingers precisely because the griever isn't given the space to air it out. Taylor Swift has invited us to vent walk with her.

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Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Sun Safety

JAMA dermatology

2017

Overexposure to the sun is associated with an increased risk of melanoma and nonmelanoma skin cancer, but indications of improvements in sun protection behavior are poor. Attempts to identify emerging themes in skin cancer control have largely been driven by groups of experts from a single field. In December 2016, 19 experts from various disciplines convened for Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Skin Cancer, a 2-day meeting hosted by the National Academy of Sciences. The group discussed knowledge gaps, perspectives on sun exposure, implications for skin cancer risk and other health outcomes, and new directions. Five themes emerged from the discussion: (1) The definition of risk must be expanded, and categories for skin physiology must be refined to incorporate population diversities. (2) Risky sun exposure often co-occurs with other health-related behaviors. (3) Messages must be nuanced to target at-risk populations. (4) Persons at risk for tanning disorder must be recognized and treated. (5) Sun safety interventions must be scalable. Efficient use of technologies will be required to sharpen messages to specific populations and to integrate them within multilevel interventions. Further interdisciplinary research should address these emerging themes to build effective and sustainable approaches to large-scale behavior change.

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