J. Aaron Johnson, PhD

Director of the Institute of Public and Preventive Health and Professor of Psychology

  • Augusta GA UNITED STATES

For two decades, J. Aaron Johnson's research has focused on evidence-based practices, primarily in substance use prevention.

Contact

Social

Biography

J. Aaron Johnson, PhD is Director of the Institute of Public and Preventive Health and Professor of Psychology at Augusta University. He received his doctorate from the University of Georgia. For two decades, his research has focused on the adoption and implementation of evidence-based practices, primarily in substance use prevention and SUD treatment. His work has been widely published in journals across many disciplines including public health, nursing, medicine, addiction, psychology, and sociology.

Areas of Expertise

Alcohol Screening
Brief Interventions
Treatment of Substance Use Disorders
Opioid Epidemic

Accomplishments

Education/Teaching Pedagogy Poster Award – International Society of Psychiatric Nurses Annual Conference

2017

Frank Bradway Rogers Information Advancement Award – Medical Library Association

2020

Invited Plenary – Carolina Undergraduate Social Science Symposium

2016

Show All +

Education

University of Georgia

PhD

Sociology

2000

University of Georgia

MA

Sociology

1995

Presbyterian College

BS

Sociology and Political Science

1993

Media Appearances

More options, less stigma: How Georgians in recovery are breaking barriers to addiction care

GPB  radio

2023-12-19

For Jocelyn Wallace, a former paramedic from Douglas County, her opioid addiction started like many others — with a prescription to treat her pain after a car accident. She was 16 years old at the time.

Her addiction would endure far longer.

“For over 26 years, I was stuck in opioid use disorder,” Wallace said. “I got married and had kids and my disease just continued to grow.”

It has been six years since Wallace last used substances, but she still vividly remembers what it felt like to be waiting for placement in a treatment or detox center to get help.

“I'd be looking at my watch going, I mean, '15 minutes from now, I'm going to be violently ill; somebody's got to help me,'” Wallace said. “And then I would give up. And I would leave. Very rarely did I even call them the next day.”
“You can pass a piece of legislation, but if you don't have any teeth behind it, then to what extent does it actually happen?” said Dr. J. Aaron Johnson, a longtime substance use disorder researcher. “It just sort of remains to be seen the impact that actually has.”

Johnson, who's director of Augusta University’s Institute of Public and Preventative Health, has spent years researching access to evidence-based treatment for SUDs. This treatment ranges from daily medication to cognitive behavioral therapy, and fully depends on the severity of a substance use disorder.

View More

What’s happening at Augusta University? Sept. 19-25

JAGWire  online

2022-09-19

After nearly two decades of rising overdose deaths, the opioid crisis was finally declared a public health emergency in 2017. In the last decade, Dr. Aaron Johnson, director of the Institute of Public and Preventive Health at Augusta University, has been working with physicians and community-based organizations in Georgia to implement programs to help those who may be addicted to opioids.

“I tell a lot of people that Georgia has really been lucky. If you look at overdose rates and other issues around the country, given our size, I feel we’ve been fortunate,” said Johnson.

View More

Georgia battles opioid crisis with community programs, education

JAGWire  online

2022-09-13

Dr. Aaron Johnson, director of the Institute of Public and Preventive Health at Augusta University, said during the last three decades, we’ve seen three phases of the epidemic.

“Initial issues were prescription opioids,” said Johnson. “A lot of state and federal policy changes, like prescription drug monitoring programs, made prescription opioids more difficult to obtain. So the epidemic sort of shifted from prescription opioids to heroin. We started to get a handle on it a bit and then we started to see the fentanyl epidemic. Fentanyl is a synthetic opioid that is 100 times more potent than morphine.”

View More

Show All +

Articles

Psychosocial well-being and firearm storage practices: evidence from five US states

BMJ Journals

Biplab Kumar Datta, Jennifer E. Jaremski, Aaron Johnson

2024-02-06

Objective Gun safety practices can play a pivotal role in preventing suicide and unintentional injuries involving a firearm. This study aimed to assess whether psychosocial well-being, measured by emotional support, feeling of social isolation and life satisfaction, influenced safe storage practices among individuals who had firearms in or around their home.

Methods Data are from the firearm safety module of the 2022 Behavioural Risk Factor Surveillance System survey of 11 722 individuals having firearms and living in California, Minnesota, Nevada, New Mexico and Ohio. Respondents were asked to identify how guns were stored in their homes including: (1) not loaded, (2) loaded but locked and (3) loaded and unlocked. Multinomial logistic regression models with controls for sociodemographic correlates assess the relative risks of certain storage measures.

Results Relative to the base outcome of not loaded, the adjusted relative risks of having firearms loaded and unlocked among individuals who usually/always felt socially isolated were 1.72 (95% CI: 1.02 to 2.88) times that of individuals who never felt socially isolated. The adjusted risks among individuals who were dissatisfied with their life were 1.82 (95% CI: 1.02 to 3.24) times that of their counterparts who were very satisfied. The adjusted risks were not statistically significant among individuals who rarely/never received needed emotional support compared with individuals who always received support.

Conclusion The results suggest a strong relationship between social isolation and life satisfaction and safe storage practices at home. Policies designed to improve psychosocial well-being, therefore, may present an important opportunity for preventing unintentional firearm injuries.

View more

Using Actigraphy as a measure of cortical arousals in Cardiopulmonary Sleep Studies

Sleep Medicine

2022

Results: A repeated measures ANOVA will be used in order to determine the differences between AHI for participants between conditions and a correlation between cortical arousals (EEG) and movement (actigraphy) after obstructive hypopnoeic episodes will be calculated.
Conclusions: This study assesses the risk of underdiagnosing OSA in ambulatory cardiovascular studies that are already used within practice.

View more

Study protocol: The maternal health multilevel intervention for racial equity (maternal health MIRACLE) project

Contemporary Clinical Trials

2022

Purpose
To test the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of a multilevel intervention for population-level African American (AA) severe maternal morbidity and mortality.
Background
Severe maternal morbidity and mortality in the U.S. disproportionately affect AA women. Inequities occur at many levels, including community, provider, and health system levels.
Design

View more

Show All +