
Rachel Ceballos, PhD, Named Senior Director Of Community Outreach And Engagement
 
 Rachel Ceballos, PhD, has been appointed senior director of community outreach and engagement at Huntsman Cancer Institute at the University of Utah .
Rachel Ceballos, PhD, has been appointed senior director of community outreach and engagement at 
Ceballos is a biobehavioral scientist who conducts research on ways to reduce cancer health disparities. Her primary focus is on improving health outcomes of people who are medically underserved, and communities historically disproportionately affected by cancer. She uses mixed-methods and community-engaged approaches to study the psychosocial impacts of cancer, improve cancer screening rates, deliver culturally appropriate cancer education, and support cancer survivors, among other focus areas. Throughout her career, she has championed equity, diversity, and inclusion work through mentorship of students and through servant leadership on numerous boards, task forces, and committees.
“We are absolutely delighted to welcome Dr. Ceballos to Huntsman Cancer Institute and Utah,” says 
Dr. Ceballos previously served as an associate professor in the division of Public Health Sciences and as program lead for rural populations in the Office of Community Outreach and Engagement at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center in Seattle, Washington.
“I am thrilled to join Huntsman Cancer institute and contribute to the momentum of impact and change happening across the region,” says Ceballos. “I am excited to help bring the community voice into the Mountain West’s fight against cancer.”
Ceballos says the inspiration for her work comes from the injustices and strengths she saw in the community of her youth and continues to see among the individuals, communities, and colleagues she has the privilege of working with today.
In her position, Ceballos will lead Huntsman Cancer Institute’s 
While serving eight years in the U.S. Coast Guard, Dr. Ceballos began her academic career at Skyline College in San Bruno, California and received a Bachelor of Arts in Psychology from California State University, Long Beach. She earned a master’s degree and PhD in biobehavioral health from the Pennsylvania State University, where she studied the effects of laboratory-based stressors on neuroendocrine and immune function in human and animal models. She received post-doctoral training at the University of Washington, expanding her interdisciplinary training to include community-engaged research practices to address cancer inequities and health disparities.
“Since our founding, Huntsman Cancer Institute has been a leader in community outreach and engagement work,” says 

















































































