Paloma Beamer

Professor, Department of Community, Environment & Policy, College of Public Health
Associate Professor, Chemical & Environmental Engineering
Associate Professor, Bio5 Institute
Associate Professor, American Indian Studies GIDP
Associate Professor, Arid Lands GIDP
Associate Research Scientists, Asthma and Airways Disease Research Center
Director, Community Engagement Core, Southwest Environmental Health Sciences Center

Paloma I. Beamer, Ph.D., is a professor in the College of Public Health at the University of Arizona. She holds joint appointments as an associate professor of Chemical & Environmental Engineering and as a research scientist in the Asthma and Airway Disease Research Center.  She is the Community Engagement Core Director for the Southwest Environmental Health Sciences Center (NIEHS P30). She is an environmental engineer by training and earned her BS from the University of California Berkeley and her MS and PhD from Stanford University. Her research focuses on understanding how individuals are exposed to environmental contaminants and the health risks of these exposures with a special focus on vulnerable populations, including children, low-wage immigrant workers, Native Americans and those in the US-Mexico Border Region. 

Dr. Beamer has received a Mentored Quantitative Research Award from NIH, a Scientific Technological Achievement Award (Level I) from the US EPA, and Young Investigator Award from Yuma Friends of Arizona Health Sciences. She was selected as one of Tucson’s “40 under 40” and as an Emerging Investigator for an international journal, Environmental Science: Processes & Impact. She has served on the Board of Scientific Counselors for both US EPA and ATSDR. She is currently an Associate Editor for Environmental Health Perspectives.

Dr. Beamer is the Past President for the International Society of Exposure Science. She is a lifetime member of the Society for Hispanic Professional Engineers (SHPE) and the Society for the Advancement of Chicanos and Native Americans in Science (SACNAS).

Degree(s)

  • PhD, Civil and Environmental Engineering, Stanford University, 2007