Joy Hammel
Professor, Disability and Human Development
Professor, Wade Meyer Endowed Chair, Director of Graduate Studies (OTD), Occupational Therapy
Professor, Rehabilitation Sciences
Focus Areas
Office Phone
Office
1919 W. Taylor St., 334 AHSB
Mail Code
811
Office Hours
By appointment
Related Sites
About
Joy's research and teaching focus on community-based participatory action research related to community living and participation choice, control and societal opportunity or disparities with people who are aging with disabilities and disability & aging communities. This includes: 1) research to identify key environmental barriers and supports to least restrictive community living and full societal participation of people with long term disabilities and chronic conditions, 2) research to create and test new consumer-directed and patient-centered assessment tools and item banks to evaluate health and participation disparities, and 3) participation-focused, self management intervention research to effect systems change, action plan environmental and policy issues, and build community capacity related to community living and participation. Joy also identifies as a disabled person and scholar herself and is actively involved in transferring researching findings and knowledge back to disability and aging communities to decrease health disparities and improve health and participation opportunities. Joy teaches courses in Disability Policy and PAR and Curriculum Design.
Selected Grants
National Institute on Disability, Independent Living and Rehabilitation Research, Americans with Disabilities Act Participation Action Research, Co-PI
Housing and Urban Development, Housing Discrimination for People with Mental Disabilities, PI
Selected Publications
Publication Aggregators
Service to the Community
Joy collaborates closely with local, state, national and international disability communities. These include Access Living Center for Independent Living, Progress Center for Independent Living, and the National Center for Independent Living Network. The ADA PARC project (adaparc.org) involves collaboration with ADA Regional Centers across the country to document participation disparities.
Leadership in the Profession
National Quality Forum, Member of the Dual Eligibles MAP Working Group
University of Illinois at Chicago, Wade-Meyer Endowed Chair of Occupational Therapy
Visiting Research Professor, University of Norwegian University of Science & Technology, Trondheim, Norway
National Center on Medical and Rehabilitation Research (NCMRR), National Advisory Board
Notable Honors
2017-2020 - University Fellow with U of I system, Univerity of Illinois system
2016 - Awarded Best Research Paper, National Association for Rehabilitation & Research Centers
2014 - Academy of Research, American Occupational Therapy Foundation
2014 - Terry Brittell OT/OTA national leadership award for OTR/COTA collaboration, American Occupational Therapy Association
Education
PhD, Educational Psychology, University of California at Berkeley, 1994
Master of Art, Education, Instructional Design/Educational Technology, San Francisco State University, 1989
Bachelor of Science, Occupational Therapy, University of Wisconsin-Madison, 1986