Paloma Beamer

Paloma Beamer

Professor, Public Health
Professor, Chemical and Environmental Engineering
Professor, American Indian Studies-GIDP
Professor, BIO5 Institute
Member of the General Faculty
Member of the Graduate Faculty
Primary Department
Contact
(520) 626-0006

Research Interest

Paloma I. Beamer, Ph.D., joined the College of Public Health in 2007 as an assistant professor in Environmental Health Sciences. The central motivation behind her research is in the development of tools that can help provide more robust exposure and dose estimates and improve the demonstration of a relationship between measured environmental concentrations and resulting health effects, particularly amongst children and underserved populations. Currently Dr. Beamer is using both computer modeling and laboratory techniques in her research. She is currently using GIS techniques to assess the risk of wheezing from exposure to traffic pollutants in early childhood. As an expert in micro-activity patterns she is examining the activity patterns of older children and utilizing them to estimate dust ingestion. Dr. Beamer has built a laboratory to characterize exposure and risk of water-borne contaminants. Currently she is using this laboratory to measure the concentration of tricholoethylene in breastmilk and water contaminants in Nogales. Dr. Beamer is also involved field sampling and exposure modeling projects aimed at understanding children's exposures to pesticides in agricultural communities and metals near hazardous waste sites. Dr. Beamer has served as Academic Councilor on the Board of the International Society of Exposure Science. She has been a long time member of the Society for Hispanic Professional Engineers and the Society for the Advancement of Chicanos and Native Americans in Science. She has received the "Scientific Technological Achievement Award" from US EPA, "Mentored Quantitative Research Development Award" from NIH, and the "40 under 40" Award from the Arizona Daily Star and Tucson Hispanic Chamber of Commerce.

Publications

Beamer, P. -., Sugeng, A. J., Kelly, M. D., Lothrop, N., Klimecki, W. -., Wilkinson, S. T., & Loh, M. M. (2014). Use of dust fall filters as passive samplers for metal concentrations in air for communities near contaminated mine tailings. Environmental Science Processes and Impacts, 16(6), 1157-1536.
BIO5 Collaborators
Paloma Beamer, Walter Klimecki
Beamer, P. I., Klimecki, W. T., Loh, M., Van Horne, Y. O., Sugeng, A. J., Lothrop, N., Billheimer, D., Guerra, S., Lantz, R. C., Canales, R. A., & Martinez, F. D. (2016). Response to García-Nieto et al. Comments on Beamer et al. Association of Children's Urinary CC16 Levels with Arsenic Concentrations in Multiple Environmental Media. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2016, 13, 521. International journal of environmental research and public health, 13(10).
BIO5 Collaborators
Paloma Beamer, Dean Billheimer, Stefano Guerra, Walter Klimecki, Clark Lantz, Fernando Martinez

We would like to thank the editors for providing us with the opportunity to respond to the points raised by Dr. García Nieto.[...].

Gerba, C. P., Koenig, D. W., Sifuentes, L. Y., Plotkin, K. R., Beamer, P. -., & Reynolds, K. A. (2014). The Healthy Workplace Project: Reduced Viral Exposure in an Office Setting. Archives of Environmental and Occupational Health.
Madera-Garcia, V., Beamer, P., Werner, J. D., & Verhougstraete, M. (2018). Legionella is a Miner issue. International Journal of Mining Science and Technology.
Beamer, P., Beamer, P., Lothrop, N. Z., Lothrop, N. Z., Stern, D., Stern, D., Billheimer, D. D., Billheimer, D. D., Wright, A., Wright, A., Martinez, F., & Martinez, F. (2015). Increased wheezing risk associated with diesel exposure among children of younger mothers. European Respiratory Journal, 46(3), 853-855. doi:10.1183/09031936.00227214
BIO5 Collaborators
Paloma Beamer, Dean Billheimer