E. Alison Holman

Professor of Nursing UC Irvine

  • Irvine CA

E. Alison Holman studies the early post-event predictors of co-morbid trauma-related mental and physical health problems.

Contact

Media

Biography

E. Alison Holman's research focuses on understanding the early post-event predictors of comorbid trauma-related mental and physical health problems. She seeks to identify predictors of, contributions of, and interactions between acute responses to trauma (biological, cognitive, emotional, social, environmental, behavioral) that increase vulnerability to trauma-related health problems, especially cardiovascular disease. Toward this end, Holman examines gene-environment interactions and the roles of several biological systems in acute/posttraumatic stress response: renin-angiotensin-aldosterone, endocannabinoid, and oxytocin systems as well as hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis response. The ultimate goal is to identify targets for early interventions to prevent trauma-related morbidity and mortality.

Areas of Expertise

Physical health
Acute Stress
Acute Stress & Cardiovascular Disease
Psychological Trauma
Media Exposure

Education

U.C. Irvine

PhD

Health Psychology

1996

University of California, Santa Cruz

BA

Psychology

1989

San Francisco State University

BS

Nursing

1981

Affiliations

  • International Society for Traumatic Stress Studies
  • Association for Psychological Science
  • American Psychological Association, Divisions of Health Psychology and Trauma Psychology
  • California Association for Nurse Practitioners

Media Appearances

Graphic images harm our mental health, UC Irvine researchers say

Daily Pilot  online

2024-07-24

UC Irvine researchers have found that repeated exposure to graphic photos and videos is being linked to psychological distress, according to the Times’ story by Karen Garcia. … [Roxane] Cohen Silver and [E. Alison] Holman found “a correlation to acute stress, post-traumatic stress symptoms, fear of future attacks and difficulty functioning in work and social life” when people were repeatedly exposed to photos from horrific events.

View More

Graphic imagery online can lead to psychological harm, UC Irvine experts say

Los Angeles Times  online

2024-07-19

UC Irvine researchers say repeated exposure to graphic photos and videos is being linked to psychological distress. … Roxane Cohen Silver and E. Alison Holman are researchers and professors in Irvine’s department of psychological science who have been studying the public-health effects of graphic images, including those from the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks; the Boston Marathon bombing in 2013; and the 2016 Pulse nightclub shooting in Orlando, Fla.

View More

Avoiding media-fueled psychological distress

Medical Xpress  online

2024-07-08

In an invited perspective published online in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, lead author E. Alison Holman, UC Irvine professor of nursing and psychological science; Roxane Cohen Silver, UC Irvine Distinguished Professor of psychological science, public health and medicine, as well as vice provost for institutional research, assessment and planning; and Dana Rose Garfin, assistant professor-in-residence at UCLA's Fielding School of Public Health, have applied their decades of research on viewing mass violence in both traditional and social media to the ongoing conflict between Israel and Hamas.

View More

Show All +

Research Grants

Genetic variation, stress, and functional outcomes after stroke rehabilitation

National Institute of Nursing Research

7/1/2015-6/30/2020

A national longitudinal study of community trauma exposure

National Science Foundation

1/1/2015-12/31/2017

RAPID: Responding to Terror of a Different Kind: A National Study of the Ebola Epidemic

National Science Foundation

12/1/14 - 11/30/15

Show All +

Articles

Reported Worst Life Events and Media Exposure to Terrorism in a Nationally Representative U.S. Sample

Journal of Traumatic Stress

Rebecca R. Thompson, E. Alison Holman, Roxane Cohen Silver

2020

Indirectly experienced negative life events are not considered Criterion A traumatic events per DSM‐5 posttraumatic stress disorder diagnostic criteria, yet individuals indirectly exposed to trauma via the media may report these events as peak traumatic experiences. We studied which events people considered to be the “worst” in their lifetimes to gain a better understanding of the types of events individuals consider to be distressing.

View more

The Novel Coronavirus (COVID-2019) Outbreak: Amplification of Public Health Consequences by Media Exposure

Health Psychology

Dana Rose Garfin, Roxane Cohen Silver, E. Alison Holman

2020

The 2019 novel coronavirus (COVID-2019) has led to a serious outbreak of often severe respiratory disease, which originated in China and has quickly become a global pandemic, with far-reaching consequences that are unprecedented in the modern era. As public health officials seek to contain the virus and mitigate the deleterious effects on worldwide population health, a related threat has emerged: global media exposure to the crisis.

View more

Associations between exposure to childhood bullying and abuse and adulthood outcomes in a representative national U.S. sample

Child Abuse & Neglect

Josiah A Sweeting, Dana Rose Garfin, E Alison Holman, Roxane Cohen Silver

2020

Negative childhood experiences are associated with poor health and psychosocial outcomes throughout one’s lifespan.

View more

Show All +
Powered by