Hsing-Fang Hsieh

Hsing-Fang Hsieh, MPH, PhD

Principle Investigator, Adaptable Community-Engaged Intervention for Violence Prevention: Michigan Model

Research Assistant Professor and the Co-Director of the Training and Education Core, University of Michigan Institute for Firearm Injury Prevention

fayenie@umich.edu

Dr. Hsing-Fang Hsieh is a Principal Investigator of the “Adaptable Community-Engaged Intervention for Violence Prevention: Michigan Model” project at Eastern Michigan University. She is a member of the 1. Community Engagement, 2. Data and Methods, 3. Policy, Implementation, and Economic Evaluation, and the 4. Communication and Dissemination workgroups.

Hsing-Fang Hsieh, MPH, PhD is a research assistant professor and the co-director of the Training and Education Core at the University of Michigan Institute for Firearm Injury Prevention. Dr. Hsieh is actively spearheading diverse federally and state-funded research initiatives, serving as the contact PI for a NINR-funded, mixed-method study to examine structural racism, firearm injury risks, and resiliency among Asian Americans” (1RF1NR020753, 2022–2027). Dr. Hsieh also co-leads the CDC-funded “Firearm Safety and Injury Prevention during Early Childhood” (1R01CE003592, 2023–2026, MPIs: Hsieh/Miller), focusing on parent-engaged interventions. Additionally, she serves as the Site PI, collaborating with the Michigan State Police, for the research and Evaluation of the Byrne State Crisis Intervention Program, supporting the implementation and evaluation for community violence interventions across Michigan. Additionally, as a Co-Investigator and Evaluation Director, Dr. Hsieh contributes to various projects and center grants, including the DOJ-funded National Center for School Safety (15PBJA-23-GK-00798-STOP, 2019–2026), NIH-funded T32 training program for junior firearm researchers (5T32HD108054, 2022–2027), and CDC-funded Michigan Youth Violence Prevention Center (1U01CE-003382, 2021–2026).

Affiliated Projects

Eastern Michigan University |

Adaptable Community-Engaged Intervention for Violence Prevention: Michigan Model

See Project