Monica Oxford, MSW, Ph.D
About
Monica Oxford, MSW, Ph.D., is a Research Professor in Child, Family, and Population Health Nursing at the University of Washington and the Executive Director of the Barnard Center for Infant Mental Health and Development. Her research focuses on early parenting and child developmental outcomes for families exposed to adversity. Dr. Oxford’s interest is in how context, parenting, and child characteristics combine to inform particular patterns of child outcomes and how intervention services promote both caregiver and child well-being. Dr. Oxford is also involved in training social service providers throughout Washington on infant mental health, strengths-based practice, and how providers can support caregiver-child dyadic interaction from an attachment-based perspective. Dr. Oxford is also a principal investigator of four and co-investigator on three National Institutes of Health randomized control trials that aim to evaluate a relationship-based home visiting program to support caregiver-child.
Monica Oxford, MSW, Ph.D., is a Research Professor in Child, Family, and Population Health Nursing at the University of Washington and the Executive Director of the Barnard Center for Infant Mental Health and Development. Her research focuses on early parenting and child developmental outcomes for families exposed to adversity. Dr. Oxford’s interest is in how context, parenting, and child characteristics combine to inform particular patterns of child outcomes and how intervention services promote both caregiver and child well-being. Dr. Oxford is also involved in training social service providers throughout Washington on infant mental health, strengths-based practice, and how providers can support caregiver-child dyadic interaction from an attachment-based perspective. Dr. Oxford is also a principal investigator of four and co-investigator on three National Institutes of Health randomized control trials that aim to evaluate a relationship-based home visiting program to support caregiver-child.