ADVANCE Member Research Spotlight: Jennifer Grant Weinandy, Ph.D.
ADVANCE Member Research Spotlight: Jennifer Grant Weinandy, Ph.D.
By Olivia May
Growing up in rural South Wales, Dr. Grant recognized early on the health-related challenges that small, underserved communities face. Her experiences not only shaped her empathy for rural populations but also fueled her commitment to addressing addiction in meaningful, community-centered ways.
“Ohio University felt like a natural fit,” Dr. Grant reflects. “The communities here remind me of home, and I wanted to do work that could make a genuine difference.” Since joining the Psychology Department, she has valued the collaborative, mission-driven environment and the opportunity to work alongside colleagues dedicated to serving the region.
Dr. Grant’s research on behavioral addictions and harm reduction stems from a long-standing awareness of the disparities surrounding addiction. Initially curious about why certain behaviors are labeled “addictive by some and viewed as harmless by others.” She began exploring how context shapes perceptions of addiction and treatment.
Though trained primarily as a quantitative researcher, Dr. Grant soon realized that numerical data alone could not answer the more complex questions she was asking. “I wasn’t fully capturing how people defined addiction or what they were thinking,” she explains.
For Dr. Grant, cultural awareness and equity are foundational to her research and teaching. “To effectively support treatment seeking, you have to understand and work with the community you serve,” she notes. Her projects involved collaboration with local residents through a community advisory board. Through this research, she emphasizes the importance of understanding individuals within their broader environments.
In addition to her own research, Dr. Grant also teaches courses in undergraduate psychopathology. She reminds them that clinical concepts are rarely as clear-cut as textbooks suggest. “I want students to recognize that mental health is complex,” she says. “Even when we don’t have perfect answers, we can still support each other and work toward better understanding.”
Dr. Grant is particularly excited about her research examining gambling behaviors in rural areas because this is an understudied population within addiction research. With most existing data originating from urban settings, her work aims to highlight the unique challenges and risks rural communities face.